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Project

Population developments co-determine diffusional language change: a close-up view on West-Germanic languages

This project investigates the relation between urban population developments and morphological changes in three major West-Germanic languages, English, Dutch, German, from the beginning of Early Modernity to the end of Classical Modernity (1500-1900). The main hypothesis is that morphological simplification accelerates when urban populations grow. Put more succinctly: word structure becomes simpler when cities grow. The reason is that the growth in this period is brought about mainly by immigration involving speakers from different dialects and different languages, resulting in what linguists call 'koineisation' (dialect leveling) with a decrease in morphological complexity. We take a decidedly quantitative approach, relying on linguistic databases (text corpora) as well as on demographic databases.

Date:1 Jan 2019 →  31 Dec 2022
Keywords:Germanic linguistics, Morphology
Disciplines:German language, Developmental linguistics