Zeitschrift für Sprachwissenschaft (Jun 2022)

Lexical tectonics: Mapping structural change in patterns of lexification

  • François Alexandre

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1515/zfs-2021-2041
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 41, no. 1
pp. 89 – 123

Abstract

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Whether it is based on philological data or on reconstruction, historical linguistics formulates etymological hypotheses that entail changes both in form and in meaning. Semantic change can be understood as a change in “patterns of lexification”, i. e., correspondences between forms and senses. Thus a polysemous word, which once lexified senses s1–s2–s3, evolves so it later encodes s2–s3–s4. Meanings that used to be colexified are now dislexified, and vice versa. Leaning on empirical data from Romance and from Oceanic, this study outlines a general model of historical lexicology, and identifies five types of structural innovations in the lexicon: split, merger, competition, shift, and relexification.

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