The Oxford Handbook of Historical Phonology

Author:   Patrick Honeybone (Senior Lecturer, Linguistics and English Language, Senior Lecturer, Linguistics and English Language, University of Edinburgh) ,  "Joseph Salmons (Lester W.J. ""Smoky"" Seifert Professor of Germanic Linguistic, Lester W.J. ""Smoky"" Seifert Professor of Germanic Linguistic, University of Wisconsin - Madison)"
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
ISBN:  

9780198814139


Pages:   812
Publication Date:   05 October 2017
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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The Oxford Handbook of Historical Phonology


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Author:   Patrick Honeybone (Senior Lecturer, Linguistics and English Language, Senior Lecturer, Linguistics and English Language, University of Edinburgh) ,  "Joseph Salmons (Lester W.J. ""Smoky"" Seifert Professor of Germanic Linguistic, Lester W.J. ""Smoky"" Seifert Professor of Germanic Linguistic, University of Wisconsin - Madison)"
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 16.90cm , Height: 4.20cm , Length: 24.40cm
Weight:   1.382kg
ISBN:  

9780198814139


ISBN 10:   0198814135
Pages:   812
Publication Date:   05 October 2017
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Part I Introduction and Context 1: Patrick Honeybone and Joseph Salmons: Introduction: Key Questions for Historical Phonology 2: Robert W. Murray: The Early History of Historical Phonology 3: Joseph Salmons and Patrick Honeybone: Structuralist Historical Phonology: Systems in Segmental Change Part II: Evidence and Methods in Historical Phonology 4: Anthony Fox: Phonological Reconstruction 5: Donka Minkova: Establishing Phonemic Contrast in Written Sources 6: J. Marshall Unger: Interpreting Diffuse Orthographies and Orthographic Change 7: Roger Lass: Interpreting Alphabetic Orthographies: Early Middle English Spelling 8: Martin Kümmel: The Role of Typology in Historical Phonology 9: Brett Kessler: Computational and Quantitative Approaches to Historical Phonology 10: Andrew Wedel: Simulation as an Investigative Tool in Historical Phonology 11: Warren Maguire: Using Corpora of Recorded Speech for Historical Phonology 12: Matthew J. Gordon: Exploring Chain Shifts, Mergers, and Near-Mergers as Changes in Progress Part III: Types of Phonological Change 13: András Cser: Basic Types of Phonological Change 14: David Fertig: Analogy and Morphophonological Change 15: Aditi Lahiri: Change in Word Prosody: Stress and Quantity 16: Martha Ratliff: Tonoexodus, Tonogenesis, and Tone Change 17: Laura Catharine Smith and Adam Ussishkin: The Role of Prosodic Templates in Diachrony Part IV: Fundamental Controversies in Phonological Change 18: Paul Foulkes and Marilyn Vihman: First Language Acquisition and Phonological Change 19: Tobias Scheer: How Diachronic is Synchronic Grammar? Crazy Rules, Regularity, and Naturalness 20: Mark Hale, Madelyn Kissock, and Charles Reiss: An I-Language Approach to Phonologization and Lexification 21: Betty S. Phillips: Lexical Diffusion in Historical Phonology 22: Ricardo Bermúdez-Otero: Amphichronic Explanation and the Life Cycle of Phonological Processes 23: Mark J. Jones: Individuals, Innovation, and Change 24: Alan C. L. Yu: The Role of Experimental Investigation in Understanding Sound Change Part V: Theoretical Historical Phonology 25: Patricia J. Donegan and Geoffrey S. Nathan: Natural Phonology and Sound Change 26: Robert Mailhammer, David Restle, and Theo Vennemann: Preference Laws in Phonological Change 27: Joan Bybee: Articulatory Processing and Frequency of Use in Sound Change 28: Juliette Blevins: Evolutionary Phonology: A Holistic Approach to Sound Change Typology 29: B. Elan Dresher: Rule-based Generative Historical Phonology 30: Thomas Purnell and Eric Raimy: Distinctive Features, Levels of Representation, and Historical Phonology 31: D. Eric Holt: Historical Sound Change in Optimality Theory: Achievements and Challenges 32: Paul Kiparsky: Phonologization Part VI: Sociolinguistic and Exogenous Factors in Historical Phonology 33: Alexandra D'Arcy: Variation, Transmission, Incrementation 34: David Bowie and Malcah Yaeger-Dror: Phonological Change in Real Time 35: Daniel Schreier: Historical Phonology and Koinéization 36: Fred R. Eckman and Gregory K. Iverson: Second Language Acquisition and Phonological Change 37: Christian Uffmann: Loanword Adaptation References Indexes

Reviews

Honeybone and Salmons have succeeded in compiling a useable, up-to-date, and comprehensive handbook that will prove an essential resource to generations of students and scholars interested in and working on any and all aspects of historical phonology. * Robin Meyer, Journal of Linguistics *


Author Information

"Patrick Honeybone is Senior Lecturer in Linguistics and English Language at the University of Edinburgh where his main interests are historical phonology, phonological theory, and northern English dialects. He has published articles in English Language and Linguistics, Lingua, Language Sciences, and a range of other journals. He is the main organizer of the annual Manchester Phonology Meeting. Joseph Salmons is the Lester W.J. ""Smoky"" Seifert Professor of Germanic Linguistics. He is the author of A History of German, (OUP 2012), and serves as executive editor of Diachronica: International Journal of Historical Linguistics."

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