
Contents
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1.1 Goals 1.1 Goals
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1.2 Approach, Framework, Model, Program, or Theory? 1.2 Approach, Framework, Model, Program, or Theory?
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1.3 Orientations 1.3 Orientations
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1.4 Locating Linguistic Analysis 1.4 Locating Linguistic Analysis
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1.5 Analogies Used for Understanding Linguistic Phenomena 1.5 Analogies Used for Understanding Linguistic Phenomena
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1.6 Domains of Language Structure 1.6 Domains of Language Structure
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1.7 Relations Among Domains 1.7 Relations Among Domains
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1.8 The Nature of Structures 1.8 The Nature of Structures
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1.9 Lexical vs. Functional Categories 1.9 Lexical vs. Functional Categories
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1.10 Recurring Topics 1.10 Recurring Topics
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1.11 Experimental Analysis 1.11 Experimental Analysis
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1.12 Typology 1.12 Typology
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1.13 Synchrony vs. Diachrony 1.13 Synchrony vs. Diachrony
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1.14 Sociolinguistic Phenomena 1.14 Sociolinguistic Phenomena
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1.15 On Explanation 1.15 On Explanation
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1.16 Language Acquisition and Language Evolution 1.16 Language Acquisition and Language Evolution
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1.17 Conclusions 1.17 Conclusions
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1 Introduction
Get accessBernd Heine is Emeritus Professor at the Institut für Afrikanistik, University of Cologne. He has held visiting professorships in Europe, Eastern Asia (Japan, Korea, China), Australia, Africa (Kenya, South Africa), North America (University of New Mexico, Dartmouth College), and South America (Brazil). His 33 books include Possesson: Cognitive Sources, Forces, and Grammaticalization (CUP, 1997); Auxiliaries: Cognitive Forces and Grammaticalization (OUP, 1993); Cognitive Foundations of Grammar (OUP, 1997) (with Tania Kuteva); World Lexicon of Grammaticalization (CUP, 2002); Language Contact and Grammatical Change (CUP, 2005); The Changing Languages of Europe (OUP, 2006), and The Evolution of Grammar (OUP, 2007); and with Heiko Narrog as co-editor, The Oxford Handbook of Linguistic Analysis (OUP, 2011), and The Oxford Handbook of Grammaticalization (OUP, 2012).
Heiko Narrog is professor at Tohoku University, Japan. He received a PhD in Japanese studies from the Ruhr University Bochum in 1997, and a PhD in language studies from Tokyo University in 2002. His publications include Modality in Japanese and the Layered Structure of Clause (Benjamins, 2009), Modality, Subjectivity, and Semantic Change: A Cross-Linguistic Perspective (OUP, 2012), The Oxford Handbook of Linguistic Analysis (OUP, 2010), and The Oxford Handbook of Grammaticalization (OUP, 2011), both co-edited with Bernd Heine.
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Published:09 July 2015
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Abstract
This handbook aims at offering an authoritative and state-of-the art survey of current approaches to the analysis of human languages, serving as a source of reference for scholars and graduate students. The main objective of the handbook is to provide the reader with a convenient means of comparing and evaluating the main approaches that exist in contemporary linguistics. Each of the chapters is devoted to one particular approach, theory, model, program, or framework of linguistics.
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