In:Perspectives on Language Structure and Language Change: Studies in honor of Henning Andersen
Edited by Lars Heltoft, Iván Igartua, Brian D. Joseph, Kirsten Jeppesen Kragh and Lene Schøsler
[Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 345] 2019
► pp. 13–34
Andersen (1973) and dichotomies of change
Published online: 18 June 2019
https://doi.org/10.1075/cilt.345.01jos
https://doi.org/10.1075/cilt.345.01jos
Abstract
Henning Andersen in his well-known and oft-cited (1973) article “Abductive and deductive change” (language 49(4).765–793) distinguishes two types of language change: evolutive change – defined as “change entirely explainable in terms of the linguistic system that gave rise to it” – and adaptive change – defined as “a change not explainable without reference to factors outside the linguistic system in question”. In this paper, we present an overview of the evolutive versus adaptive dichotomy in Andersen’s work and the role this dichotomy has played in the field in ensuing years. While this particular terminology has never taken a central role in discussions of these issues, the terms are still in some use, and the field as a whole has seen a proliferation of various terms focusing on this and similar dichotomies.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Evolutive versus adaptive and its historical context
- 2.1Evolutive versus adaptive in Andersen (1973)
- 2.2Earlier conceptions of this distinction
- 3.Evolutive versus adaptive and ADC’s reception
- 3.1Initial survey
- 3.2The continued development of the evolutive/adaptive dichotomy
- 3.3Reception of evolutive versus adaptive: The first twenty-five years
- 4.Why this reception for ADC and the evolutive/adaptive distinction?
- 4.1Generative rules?
- 4.2Competing terminological distinctions
- 5.More recent attention for ADC and the evolutive/adaptive distinction
- 5.1“Adaptive sound change” in Dahl (2004)
- 5.2A recent resurgence?
- 6.Conclusion
Notes References
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