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E-grāmata: Markedness and Language Change: The Romani Sample

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'Markedness' is a central notion in linguistic theory. This book is the first to provide a comprehensive survey of markedness relations across various grammatical categories, in a sample of closely-related speech varieties. It is based on a sample of over 100 dialects of Romani, collected and processed via the Romani Morpho-Syntax (RMS) Database - a comparative grammatical outline in electronic form, constructed by the authors between 2000-2004. Romani dialects provide an exciting sample of language change phenomena: they are oral languages, which have been separated and dispersed from some six centuries, and are strongly shaped by the influence of diverse contact languages.

The book takes a typological approach to markedness, viewing it as a hierarchy among values that is conditioned by conceptual and cognitive universals. But it introduces a functional-pragmatic notion of markedness, as a grammaticalised strategy employed in order to priositise information. In what is referred to as 'dynamic', such prioritisation is influenced by an interplay of factors: the values within a category and the conceptual notions that they represent, the grammatical structure onto which the category values are mapped, and the kind of strategy that is applied in order to prioritise certain value. Consequently, the book contains a thorough survey of some 20 categories (e.g Person, Number, Gender, and so on) and their formal representation in various grammatical structures across the sample. The various accepted criteria for markedness (e.g. Complexity, Differentiation, Erosion, and so on) are examined systematically in relation to the values of each and every category, for each relevant structure. The outcome is a novel picture of how different markedness criteria may cluster for certain categories, giving a concrete reality to the hitherto rather vague notion of markedness. Borrowing and its relation to markedness is also examined, offering new insights into the motivations behind contact-induced change.
Acknowledgements vii
Tables xvi
Illustrations xxi
Abbreviations xxii
Chapter
1. Introduction: Markedness and asymmetry in language
1(6)
Chapter
2. The Markedness Hypothesis
7(21)
2.1. Concepts of markedness
7(8)
2.1.1. The structuralist/semiotic approach
7(2)
2.1.2. The generative approach
9(1)
2.1.3. The typological approach
10(3)
2.1.4. The naturalness approach
13(2)
2.2. Markedness criteria
15(7)
2.2.1. Frequency
15(2)
2.2.2. Conceptual complexity
17(1)
2.2.3. Structural complexity
18(1)
2.2.4. Distribution
19(1)
2.2.5. System-dependent criteria
20(2)
2.2.6. External criteria
22(1)
2.3. Markedness and language change
22(6)
2.3.1. The markedness reduction hypothesis
22(1)
2.3.2. Type of change
23(2)
2.3.3. Markedness and language contact
25(3)
Chapter
3. Toward a communication-based model of asymmetry in language
28(20)
3.1. Factors involved in the formation of asymmetry
28(4)
3.2. Application of the model
32(3)
3.3 Criteria for asymmetry
35(9)
3.3.1. Complexity
36(1)
3.3.2. Erosion
36(1)
3.3.3. Differentiation
37(1)
3.3.4. Extension
38(1)
3.5.5. Extra-categorial distribution
39(1)
3.3.6. Exposition
40(1)
3.3.7. Borrowing
41(2)
3.3.8. Internal diversity
43(1)
3.3.9. Criteria not included in this study
43(1)
3.4. Factors motivating asymmetry
44(3)
3.4.1. Topical saliency
45(1)
3.4.2. Transparency
45(1)
3.4.3. Discourse accessibility
46(1)
3.4.4. Egocentricity
46(1)
3.4.5. Relevance
46(1)
3.5. Concluding remarks
47(1)
Chapter
4. The sample: Methodological considerations
48(20)
4.1. Sampling in a typological context
48(2)
4.2. Dialect sampling in Romani
50(8)
4.2.1. The usefulness of dialect samples
50(2)
4.2.2. The challenge of Romani
52(3)
4.2.3. Romani dialectology
55(3)
4.3. Putting typology to work in a dialect sample: The Romani Morphosyntactic Database (RMS)
58(7)
4.3.1. The database tools
58(2)
4.3.2. Function to form, form to function
60(3)
4.3.3. Data collection procedures
63(2)
4.4. Summary: Features and problems of the sample
65(3)
Chapter
5. Early Romani
68(17)
5.1. Lexicon
69(1)
5.2. The sound system
70(1)
5.3. Nominals
71(7)
5.3.1. Case marking and declension classes
71(2)
5.3.2. Adjectival modifiers
73(2)
5.3.3. Demonstratives and related forms
75(1)
5.3.4. Personal pronouns
76(1)
5.3.5. Interrogatives
77(1)
5.3.6. Indefinites
77(1)
5.4. Verbs
78(5)
5.4.1. Valency and loan verb integration
78(2)
5.4.2. Inflection classes
80(1)
5.4.3. Concord markers
81(1)
5.4.4. Tense, aspect and modality
82(1)
5.5. Other categories
83(1)
5.5.1. Local adverbs
83(1)
5.5.2. Prepositions
83(1)
5.6. Syntax
84(1)
Chapter
6. Number
85(17)
6.1. Complexity
85(3)
6.2. Erosion
88(1)
6.3. Differentiation
89(8)
6.4. Extension
97(2)
6.5. Extracategorial distribution
99(1)
6.6. Exposition
100(1)
6.7. Borrowing and internal diversity
101(1)
Chapter
7. Person
102(36)
7.1. Complexity
103(5)
7.2. Erosion
108(4)
7.3. Differentiation
112(9)
7.4. Extension
121(4)
7.5. Extracategorial distribution
125(8)
7.6. Exposition
133(1)
7.7. Borrowing
134(4)
Chapter
8. Gender
138(7)
8.1. Complexity and erosion
138(2)
8.2. Differentiation
140(1)
8.3. Extension
141(2)
8.4. Extracategorial distribution
143(1)
8.5. Internal diversity and borrowing
143(2)
Chapter
9. Degree
145(11)
9.1. Complexity
146(2)
9.2. Differentiation
148(1)
9.3. Borrowing and internal diversity
149(5)
9.4. Extension
154(2)
Chapter
10. Negation
156(6)
10.1. Complexity
156(2)
10.2. Differentiation
158(1)
10.3. Extension
158(1)
10.4. Internal diversity
159(1)
10.5. Borrowing
160(2)
Chapter
11. Cardinality
162(11)
11.1. Complexity
162(1)
11.2. Differentiation
163(1)
11.3. Extension
164(2)
11.4. Internal diversity
166(4)
11.5. Borrowing
170(3)
Chapter
12. Discreteness
173(15)
12.1. Complexity
174(7)
12.2. Erosion
181(1)
12.3. Differentiation
182(1)
12.4. Extension
183(1)
12.5. Exposition
184(1)
12.6. Internal diversity and borrowing
184(2)
12.7. Linear order
186(2)
Chapter
13. Tense, aspect, and mood
188(15)
13.1. Complexity
189(5)
13.2. Erosion
194(1)
13.3. Differentiation
194(4)
13.4. Extension
198(4)
13.5. Extracategorial distribution
202(1)
13.6. Borrowing
202(1)
Chapter
14. Modality
203(8)
14.1. Complexity
204(3)
14.2. Differentiation
207(1)
14.3. Linear order
208(1)
14.4. Borrowing
209(2)
Chapter
15. Transitivity
211(7)
15.1. Complexity
211(2)
15.2. Differentiation
213(2)
15.3. Extension
215(1)
15.4. Exposition
216(1)
15.5. Internal diversity
216(1)
15.6. Borrowing
216(2)
Chapter
16. Case and case roles
218(21)
16.1. Complexity
220(3)
16.2. Erosion
223(1)
16.3. Differentiation
224(5)
16.4. Extension
229(1)
16.5. Extracategorial distribution
230(2)
16.6. Internal diversity
232(2)
16.7. Borrowing
234(5)
Chapter
17. Localisation
239(32)
17.1. Complexity
243(7)
17.2. Erosion
250(1)
17.3. Differentiation
250(2)
17.4. Extension
252(7)
17.5. Extracategorial distribution
259(5)
17.6. Internal diversity
264(3)
17.7. Borrowing
267(4)
Chapter
18. Orientation
271(10)
18.1. Extension
273(2)
18.2. Exposition
275(1)
18.3. Internal diversity and borrowing
275(4)
18.4. Complexity
279(1)
18.5. Differentiation
280(1)
Chapter
19. Indefiniteness
281(14)
19.1. Complexity
283(1)
19.2. Extension
284(1)
19.3. Extracategorial distribution
285(1)
19.4. Internal diversity
286(1)
19.5. Borrowing
287(8)
Chapter
20. Ontological category
295(17)
20.1. Complexity
297(5)
20.2. Erosion
302(1)
20.3. Differentiation
303(1)
20.4. Extension
304(1)
20.5. Extracategorial distribution
305(3)
20.6. Internal diversity
308(1)
20.7. Borrowing
309(3)
Chapter
21. Lexicality
312(10)
21.1. Complexity
312(2)
21.2. Differentiation
314(5)
21.3. Extension
319(1)
21.4. Borrowing
320(2)
Chapter
22. Associativity
322(2)
Chapter
23. Chronological compartmentalisation
324(10)
23.1. Complexity
326(1)
23.2. Differentiation
327(1)
23.3. Extension
327(5)
23.4. Exposition
332(1)
23.5. Borrowing and diversity
332(2)
Chapter
24. Criteria for asymmetry and their distribution across categories
334(13)
24.1. Complexity
334(2)
24.2. Erosion
336(1)
24.3. Differentiation
337(2)
24.4. Extension
339(1)
24.5. Extracategorial distribution
340(1)
24.6. Exposition
341(1)
24.7. Internal diversity
342(1)
24.8. Borrowing
343(1)
24.9. Criteria relevance: Summary
344(3)
Chapter
25. Patterns of asymmetry
347(30)
25.1. The consistency of value ordering within categories
347(8)
25.1.1. General considerations
347(5)
25.1.2. Variation in linear order and polarity
352(3)
25.2. Clusters of asymmetry criteria
355(22)
25.2.1. Predictions of the Markedness Hypothesis and 'well-behaved categories'
355(7)
25.2.2. Correlating criteria: Types of clusters
362(8)
25.2.5. The position of borrowing
370(7)
Chapter
26. Conceptual motivations for asymmetry
377(29)
26.1. Iconic motivations for linear ordering
377(5)
26.1.1. Quantity
377(2)
26.1.2. Immediacy
379(1)
26.1.3. Prominence
380(1)
26.1.4. Truth and simplicity
381(1)
26.1.5. Transparency
382(1)
26.2. Global and local motivations
382(5)
26.2.1. Exposition
383(1)
26.2.2. Extension, distribution, and erosion
384(1)
26.2.3. Borrowing
385(2)
26.3. Conflicting hierarchies and conflict resolution
387(17)
26.3.1. Conflict domains
388(2)
26.3.2. Conflict categories
390(8)
26.3.3. Conflict pairs
398(6)
26.4. Motivations for asymmetry: Concluding remarks
404(2)
Chapter
27. Concluding remarks
406(4)
Appendix: Sample dialects 410(15)
Notes 425(16)
References 441(14)
Index of authors 455(3)
Index of Romani dialects 458(5)
Index of geographical names 463(2)
Index of subjects 465
Viktor Elik teaches at the Univerzita Karlova, Prague, Czech Republic.

Yaron Matras is Professor of Linguistics at the University of Manchester, UK.