- Author: Peter Trudgill, Université de Fribourg, Switzerland
- Date Published: May 2020
- availability: In stock
- format: Hardback
- isbn: 9781108477390
Were Stone-Age languages really more complex than their modern counterparts? Was Basque actually once spoken over all of Western Europe? Were Welsh-speaking slaves truly responsible for the loss of English morphology? This latest collection of Peter Trudgill’s most seminal articles explores these questions and more. Focused around the theme of sociolinguistics and language change across deep historical millennia (the Palaeolithic era to the Early Middle Ages), the essays explore topics in historical linguistics, dialectology, sociolinguistics, language change, linguistic typology, geolinguistics, and language contact phenomena. Each paper is fully updated for this volume, and includes linking commentaries and summaries, for easy cross-reference. This collection will be indispensable to academic specialists and graduate students with an interest in the sociolinguistic aspects of historical linguistics.
- These important thematically linked essays on sociolinguistic aspects of historical linguistics have not been published in book form before
- Features one brand new chapter, written specially for this collection
- Will provoke discussion through its wide-ranging linguistic-geographical coverage and broad historical focus