Frequency and the Emergence of Linguistic Structure

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Joan L. Bybee, Paul Hopper
John Benjamins Publishing, Jan 1, 2001 - Language Arts & Disciplines - 492 pages
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A mainstay of functional linguistics has been the claim that linguistic elements and patterns that are frequently used in discourse become conventionalized as grammar. This book addresses the two issues that are basic to this claim: first, the question of what types of elements are frequently used in discourse and second, the question of how frequency of use affects cognitive representations. Reporting on evidence from natural conversation, diachronic change, variability, child language acquisition and psycholinguistic experimentation the original articles in this book support two major principles. First, the content of people s interactions consists of a preponderance of subjective, evaluative statements, dominated by the use of pronouns, copulas and intransitive clauses. Second, the frequency with which certain items and strings of items are used has a profound influence on the way language is broken up into chunks in memory storage, the way such chunks are related to other stored material and the ease with which they are accessed to produce new utterances.
 

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Contents

Introduction to frequency and the emergence of linguistic structure
1
Local patterns of subjectivity in person and verb type
61
Paths to prepositions? A corpusbased study of the acquisition of
91
Lexical diffusion lexical frequency and lexical analysis
123
Word frequency lenition and contrast
137
Emergent phonotactic generalizations in English and Arabic
159
Ambiguity and frequency effects in regular verb inflection
181
A perspective from Russian
201
Evidence from emerging modals
309
Frequency effects on French liaison
337
The role of frequency in the specialization of the English anterior
361
Hypercorrect pronoun case in English? Cognitive processes that account
383
Variability frequency and productivity in the irrealis domain of French
405
Familiarity information flow and linguistic form
431
Emergentist approaches to language
449
Inflationary effects in language and elsewhere
471

Evidence from reduction
229
Frequency effects and wordboundary palatalization in English
255
The role of frequency in the realization of English that
281
Name index
487
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Page ii - Volumes in this series will be functionally and typologically oriented, covering specific topics in language by collecting together data from a wide variety of languages and language typologies. The orientation of the volumes will be substantive rather than formal, with the aim of investigating universals of human language via as broadly defined a data base as possible, leaning toward cross-linguistic, diachronic, developmental and live-discourse data. The series is, in spirit as well as in fact,...
Page ii - TYPOLOGICAL STUDIES IN LANGUAGE (TSL) A companion series to the journal "STUDIES IN LANGUAGE" Honorary Editor: Joseph H. Greenberg General Editor: Michael Noonan Assistant Editors: Spike Gildea, Suzanne Kemmer Editorial Board: Wallace Chafe (Santa Barbara...
Page 267 - The boundary # is automatically inserted at the beginning and end of every string dominated by a major category, ie, by one of the lexical categories "noun," "verb," "adjective," or by a category such as "sentence," ''noun phrase," "verb phrase," which dominates a lexical category.
Page 323 - The notion of Emergent Grammar is meant to suggest that structure, or regularity, comes out of discourse and is shaped by discourse as much as it shapes discourse in an on-going process.
Page 84 - These signs are always available and become 'full' as soon as a speaker introduces them into each instance of his discourse. Since they lack material reference, they cannot be misused; since they do not assert anything, they are not subject to the condition of truth and escape all deniaL Their role is to provide the instrument of a conversion that one could call the conversion of language into discourse. It is by identifying himself as a unique person pronouncing / that each speaker sets himself...
Page 61 - ... the two terms and define them by mutual relationship that the linguistic basis of subjectivity is discovered. But must this basis be linguistic? By what right does language establish the basis of subjectivity? As a matter of fact, language is responsible for it in all its parts. Language is marked so deeply by the expression of subjectivity that one might ask if it could still function and be called language if it were constructed otherwise.
Page 215 - Group 1 Group 2 Group 3 Group 4 Group 5 Group 6 Group 7...
Page 445 - Baddeley, AD, Gathercole, SE, & Papagno, C. (1998). The phonological loop as a language learning device.

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About the author (2001)

Joan Bybee is Professor of Linguistics, University of New Mexico

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