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Languages of the world : an introduction / Asya Pereltsvaig.
Author
Pereltsvaig, Asya, 1972-
[Browse]
Format
Book
Language
English
Εdition
Third edition.
Published/Created
Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2021.
Description
xix, 482 pages : illustrations, charts ; 25 cm
Details
Subject(s)
Language and languages
—
Study and teaching
[Browse]
Multilingualism
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Summary note
Are you curious to know what all human languages have in common and in what ways they differ? Do you want to find out how language can be used to trace different peoples and their past? Then this book is for you! Now in its third edition, it guides beginners through the rich diversity of the world's languages. It presupposes no background in linguistics, and introduces the reader to linguistic concepts with the help of problem sets, end of chapter exercises and an extensive bibliography. Charts of language families provide geographical and genealogical information, and engaging sidebars with demographic, social, historical and geographical facts help to contextualise and bring languages to life. This edition includes a fully updated glossary of all linguistic terms used, new problem sets, and a new chapter on cartography. Supplementary online materials include links to all websites mentioned, and answers to the exercises for instructors.
Notes
Originally published in 2012.
Bibliographic references
Includes bibliographical references (pages 449-470) and indexes.
Contents
Machine generated contents note: 1. Introduction
1.1. Languages, Dialects, and Accents
1.2. Language Families
1.3. How Language Families Are Established: Comparative Reconstruction
1.4. Linguistic Diversity
1.5. How Do Languages Diversify?
1.6. Field Linguistics
1.7. Focus on: Language Maps
Do It Yourself
2. Languages of Europe
2.1. The Indo-European Language Family
2.2. The Indo-European Controversy
2.3. Non-Indo-European Languages of Europe
2.4. Focus on: Endangered Languages of Europe
3. Languages of Iran and South Asia
3.1. Indo-European Languages of Iran and South Asia
3.1.1. Iranian Languages
3.1.2. Indo-Aryan Languages
3.2. Dravidian Languages
3.3. Other Languages of South Asia
3.4. Focus on: Universals and the Parametric Theory of Language
4. Languages of Northern Eurasia
4.1 Finno-Ugric Languages
4.2. Other Uralic Languages
4.3. Turkic Languages
4.4. Other Languages of Siberia
4.5. Focus on: Evidential Markers
5. Languages of the Caucasus
5.1. Northwest Caucasian Languages
5.2. Northeast Caucasian Languages
5.3. Kartvelian Languages
5.4. Indo-European Languages in the Caucasus
5.5. Focus on: Head-Marking vs. Dependent-Marking
6. Languages of the Greater Middle East
6.1. Afroasiatic Languages
6.2. Semitic Languages
6.3. Berber Languages
6.4. Focus on: Language Contact
7. Languages of Sub-Saharan Africa
7.1. Nilo-Saharan Languages
7.2. Niger-Congo Languages
7.3. Khoisan Languages
7.4. Focus on: Official Languages, Trade Languages, and Creole Languages in Sub-Saharan Africa
8. Languages of Eastern Asia
8.1^
4.1 Sino-Tibetan Languages
8.2. Austro-Asiatic Languages
8.3. Tai-Kadai Languages
8.4. Japanese and Korean
8.5. Focus on: Isolating Morphology and Language Change
9. Languages of the South Sea Islands
9.1. Discovery of the Austronesian Family and the Austronesian Homeland
9.2. Today's Austronesian Languages and the Internal Classification of the Family
9.3. Linguistic Properties of Austronesian Languages
9.4. Focus on: The Mystery of Malagasy
10. Aboriginal Languages of New Guinea and Australia
10.1. Languages of New Guinea
10.1.1. Overview of Papuan Languages
10.1.2. Areal Papuan Features
10.1.3. Tok Pisin
10.2. Languages of Australia
10.3. Focus on: Is There Such a Thing as a Primitive Language?
11. Native Languages of the Americas
11.1. Languages of North America
11.2^$g8.1^
4.1 Languages of Meso-America
11.3. Languages of South America
11.4. Focus on: The Piraha Controversy
12. Remaining Issues: Macro Families, Sign Languages, and Constructed Languages
12.1. Macro Families
12.1.1. The Dene-Yeniseian Hypothesis
12.1.2. Altaic and Ural-Altaic Macro Families
12.1.3. The Nostratic and Eurasiatic Hypotheses
12.1.4. Other Hypothesized Macro Families
12.2. Sign Languages
12.3. Constructed Languages
Do It Yourself.
Show 74 more Contents items
ISBN
1108748120 ((paperback))
9781108748124 ((paperback))
9781108479325 ((hardback))
1108479324 ((hardback))
OCLC
1154423212
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