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You can set up a free account as an independent scholar if you need one and you can download, or you can, drop me a line at Campbell’s Glossary of Historical Linguistics was up all too briefly, but I have a copy of that too. If you want this book, grab it while the grabbing is good, as it might go away. (See my 2004 obit post for Trask.) Thanks, John! The only theories introduced here are theories of historical linguistics and of language change.
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Some acquaintance with the notation of classical generative phonology will be helpful for Chapter 3, but is not essential. The book is as atheoretical as possible: absolutely no knowledge of contemporary theories of phonology or syntax is presupposed, and such theories are not introduced in the book. I suspect that I would not have been as capable as he was in producing such an impressive structure while not forgetting the small details so important to its success.īut surely this paragraph (addressed to the teacher) is ur-Trask: While a considerable part of this book has been formed by me, the general conception is Larry Trask’s. It is also important that I pay tribute to Larry Trask, a man I never met, much to my regret. The editor, Robert McColl Millar, (a professor of linguistics and Scots at Aberdeen) writes: New case studies focusing on Germanic languages and American and New Zealand English, and updated exercises covering each of the topics within the bookĪ brand new companion website featuring material for both professors and students, including discussion questions and exercises as well as discussions of the exercises within the book. More detail on morphological change including cutting-edge discussions of iconizationĬoverage of recent developments in sociolinguistic explanations of variation and change