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The Evolution of Grammar: Tense, Aspect, and Modality in the Languages of the World

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By: Joan Bybee, Revere Perkins and William Pagliuca
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EDITORIAL REVIEW

Joan Bybee and her colleagues present a new theory of the evolution of grammar that links structure and meaning in a way that directly challenges most contemporary versions of generative grammar. This study focuses on the use and meaning of grammatical markers of tense, aspect, and modality and identifies a universal set of grammatical categories. The authors demonstrate that the semantic content of these categories evolves gradually and that this process of evolution is strikingly similar across unrelated languages.

Through a survey of seventy-six languages in twenty-five different phyla, the authors show that the same paths of change occur universally and that movement along these paths is in one direction only. This analysis reveals that lexical substance evolves into grammatical substance through various mechanisms of change, such as metaphorical extension and the conventionalization of implicature. Grammaticization is always accompanied by an increase in frequency of the grammatical marker, providing clear evidence that language use is a major factor in the evolution of synchronic language states.

The Evolution of Grammar has important implications for the development of language and for the study of cognitive processes in general.

PRODUCT DETAILS

Publisher: University Of Chicago Press
Pub. Date: 15th November 1994
Catalog: Book
Media: Paperback
Number Of Pages: 420
Ean: 9780226086651
Isbn: 0226086658

ABOUT THIS BOOK

USER REVIEWS

The Evolution of Grammar: Tense, Aspect, and Modality in the World's Languages
~ Written on May 11, 2008. 1 out of 1 users found this review helpful.

The Evolution of Grammar focuses on two issues: first, is it possible to discover diachronic relationships between various meanings of verbal morphology; and second, is there a relationship between the type of expression (auxiliary, particle, affix, or internal stem change)and the age of the grammatical morpheme(gram)? The answer appears to be yes in both cases. The authors use a large and diverse typological study, and a number of similarities occur. Completive and Resultative morphemes are frequently the source of Anteriors, Perfectives, and Pasts. New paraphrastic progressives take over a portion of the semantic space once occupied by an older present tense. Agent oriented modalities expand into the territory of speaker oriented and epistemic modalities and eventually are used in a subjunctive manner. Verbs of desire, volition, and movement become sources of future tense markers.
This book is an interesting journey for historical linguists, typologists, semanticists who would like more depth of analysis, and syntaticians who are struggling with the nature of little "v" and differences in complementizers.

Historical Syntax
~ Written on Aug 2, 2005. 4 out of 5 users found this review helpful.

This text, along with Harris & Campbell's Historical syntax in cross-linguistic perspective and Hopper and Traugott's Grammaticalization, is central to the Typological-Functional research documentation into diachronic language change. Broadly cross-linguistic and solid in its empirical grounding, this text will be of great utility to any researcher in the field.

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