John Benjamins Publishing, 2009
ISBN: 978 90 272 1928 2
This book deals with the consequences of converging and diverging
processes and their development in language contact situations. It
provides insights into the various forms of language contact and the
conditions under which bilingual speakers master their every-day life
in bilingual communities. Its nine contributions cover both theoretical
and typological aspects, such as the classification of languages, the
role of language contact, linguistic complexity and spontaneous speech
innovations, and convergence and divergence processes in translation,
(morpho)syntax and phonology/phonetics. Taken together, these studies
provide challenges for linguistic theories that generalize from
situations of monolingualism suggesting instead that a sound linguistic
theory cannot be a theory for just one single, isolated language but
must be a theory for at least two languages. It must also account for
the fact that some structures involved in contact situations are not
kept apart but develop in such a way that the distance decreases
between the languages involved.
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Edited by Kurt Braunmüller and Juliane House