: Bernd Kortmann
: Dialectology meets Typology Dialect Grammar from a Cross-Linguistic Perspective
: De Gruyter Mouton
: 9783110197327
: Trends in Linguistics. Studies and Monographs [TiLSM]ISSN
: 1
: CHF 203.70
:
: Allgemeine und Vergleichende Sprachwissenschaft
: English
: 547
: Wasserzeichen/DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: PDF

In what ways can dialectologists and language typologists profit from each others' work when looking across the fence? This is the guiding question of this volume, which involves follow-up questions such as: How can dialectologists profit from adopting the large body of insights in and hypotheses on language variation and language universals familiar from work in language typology, notably functional typology?Vice versa, what can typologists learn from the study of non-standard varieties? What are possible contributions of dialectology to areal typologies and the study of grammaticalization? What are important theoretical and methodological implications of this new type of collaboration in the study of language variation? The 18 contributors, among them many distinguished dialectologists, sociolinguists and typologists, address these and other novel questions on the basis of analyses of the morphology and syntax of a broad range of dialects (Germanic, Romance, Balto-Slavic, Indo-Aryan).


Bernd Kortmann is Professor at the University of Freiburg, Germany.

Frontmatter1
Contents5
Introduction7
Dialectology and typology – An integrative perspective17
Local markedness as a heuristic tool in dialectology: The case of amn’t53
Non-standard evidence in syntactic typology – Methodological remarks on the use of dialect data vs spoken language data75
The typology of motion and posture verbs: A variationist account99
Dynamic typology and vernacular universals133
Definite articles in Scandinavian: Competing grammaticalization processes in standard and non-standard varieties153
Person marking in Dutch dialects187
A typology of relative clauses in German dialects217
Do as a tense and aspect marker in varieties of English251
Typology, dialectology and the structure of complementation in Romani283
Problems for typology: Perfects and resultatives in spoken and non-standard English and Russian311
Comparing grammatical variation phenomena in non-standard English and Low German dialects from a typological perspective341
On three types of dialect variation and their implications for linguistic theory. Evidence from verb clusters in Swiss German dialects373
Substrate, superstrate and universals: Perfect constructions in Irish English407
The impact of language contact and social structure on linguistic structure: Focus on the dialects of Modern Greek441
Jespersen’s cycle and the interaction of predicate and quantifier negation in Flemish459
“Gendered” pronouns in English dialects – A typological perspective485
Population linguistics on a micro-scale. Lessons to be learnt from Baltic and Slavic dialects in contact503
Backmatter533