In:Paradigm Change: In the Transeurasian languages and beyond
Edited by Martine Robbeets and Walter Bisang
[Studies in Language Companion Series 161] 2014
► pp. v–viii
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Published online: 8 October 2014
https://doi.org/10.1075/slcs.161.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/slcs.161.toc
Table of contents
List of tables
List of figures
List of contributors
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1. When paradigms change
Part I. Paradigm change: Theoretical issues
Chapter 2. On the strength of morphological paradigms: A historical account of radical pro-drop
Chapter 3. Derivational paradigms in diachrony
and comparison
Chapter 4. On arguing from diachrony for paradigms
Chapter 5. Reconstructing the Niger-Congo Verb Extension Paradigm: What’s Cognate, Copied or Renewed?
Part II. The continuation of paradigms
Chapter 6. Perceived formal and functional equivalence: The Hungarian ik-conjugation
Chapter 7. Comparative consequences of the tongue root harmony analysis for proto-Tungusic, proto-Mongolic, and proto-Korean
Chapter 8. Old Japanese bigrade paradigms and Korean passives and causatives
Chapter 9. The Japanese inflectional paradigm in a Transeurasian perspective
Part III. The innovation of paradigms
Chapter 10. A Yakut copy of a Tungusic viewpoint
aspect paradigm
Chapter 11. Amdo Altaic directives and comparatives based on the verb ‘to see’
Chapter 12. Innovations and archaisms in Siberian Turkic spatial case paradigms: A Transeurasian historical and areal perspective
Chapter 13. Paradigm copying in Tungusic: The Lamunkhin dialect of Ėven and beyond
Chapter 14. Ural-Altaic: The Polygenetic Origins of Nominal Morphology
in the Transeurasian Zone
Language index
Subject index
