Human languages are quintessentially historical phenomena. Every known aspect of linguistic form and content is subject to change in historical time (Lehmann, 1995; Bybee, 2004). Many facts of language, syntactic no less than semantic, find their explanation in the historical processes that generated them. If adpositions were once verbs, then the fact that they tend to occur on the same side of their arguments as do verbs ("cross-category harmony": Hawkins, 1983) is a matter of historical contingency rather than a reflection of inherent structural constraints on human language (Delancey, 1993). © 2007 Springer-Verlag London.
CITATION STYLE
Merker, B., & Okanoya, K. (2007). The natural history of human language: Bridging the gaps without magic. In Emergence of Communication and Language (pp. 403–420). Springer London. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-84628-779-4_21
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