Phonological Drift and Language Contact
The Northwest European Phonological Area
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Publishing:31st May '25
£100.00
This title is due to be published on 31st May, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Using advances in linguistic theory this book explains multiple unusual sound patterns that occur in different languages of northern Europe.
Despite typological differences, the languages of northern Europe share unusual sound patterns. Using the latest advances in theoretical linguistics, the study of sound change, and language variation, this book offers insights into the development of these features and what they tell us about past cultural and linguistic contacts.Several language families of northern Europe – Germanic, Celtic, and Uralic – share phonetic and phonological patterns that are typologically unusual. This book demonstrates how we can better understand these convergences: they exemplify the phenomenon of drift. Using the latest advances in theoretical linguistics, the study of sound change, and language variation, it offers insights into the development of these features and what they tell us about past cultural and linguistic contacts. Although the languages are not closely related, an understanding of drift grounded in the theory of the life cycle of phonological patterns reveals the workings of convergent developments. Covering a wide range of vernacular varieties, this book shows how phonological microvariation is illuminated by an approach grounded in the theory of the life cycle and historical sociolinguistics. It is essential reading for historical and theoretical linguists, and anyone with an interest in the cultural and linguistic contacts across northern Europe.
ISBN: 9781108497381
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
340 pages