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2014 | 1 | 1 |

Article title

Lexical selection and the evolution of language units

Authors

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
In this paper I discuss similarities and differences between a potential new model of language development - lexical selection, and its biological equivalent - natural selection. Based on Dawkins' (1976) concept of the meme I discuss two units of language and explore their potential to be seen as linguistic replicators. The central discussion revolves around two key parts - the units that could potentially play the role of replicators in a lexical selection system and a visual representation of the model proposed. draw on work by Hoey (2005), Wray (2008) and Sinclair (1996, 1998) for the theoretical basis; Croft (2000) is highlighted as a similar framework. Finally brief examples are taken from the free online corpora provided by the corpus analysis tool Sketch Engine (Kilgarriff, Rychly, Smrz and Tugwell 2004) to ground the discussion in real world communicative situations. The examples highlight the point that different situational contexts will allow for different units to flourish based on the local social and linguistic environment. The paper also shows how a close look at the specific context and strings available to a language user at any given moment has potential to illuminate different aspects of language when compared with a more abstract approach.

Publisher

Year

Volume

1

Issue

1

Physical description

Dates

received
2014-09-15
accepted
2015-05-27
online
2015-06-25

Contributors

author
  • University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth, United Kingdom

References

  • Baxter, Gareth J., Richard A. Blythe, William Croft et al. 2009. Modeling language change: an evaluation of Trudgill’s theory of the emergence of New Zealand English. Language Variation and Change 21(2). 157-196. [WoS]
  • Biber, Douglas. 2009. A corpus-driven approach to formulaic language in English: multi- word patterns in speech and writing. Paper presented at Corpus Linguistics 2009, University of Liverpool, 20-23 July.
  • Croft, William. 2000. Explaining Language Change. Harlow: Pearson Education.
  • Darwin, Charles. 1871. The descent of man. London: Murray.
  • Dawkins, Richard. 1976. The Selfish Gene. Oxford: Oxford University press.
  • Dennett, Daniel. 2003. Freedom evolves. New York City: Viking.
  • Hadikin, Glenn. 2014. Korean English: a corpus driven study of a New English. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
  • Hoey, Michael. 2005. Lexical Priming: a new theory of words and language. London: Routledge.
  • Hull, David. 1988. Science as a process: an evolutionary account of the social and conceptual development of science. Chicago: University of Chicago press.
  • Jablonka, Eva, Anna Zeligowski & Marion J. Lamb. 2014. Evolution in Four Dimensions : Genetic, Epigenetic, Behavioral, and Symbolic Variation in the History of Life. Cambridge, MA: MIT press.
  • Kilgariff, Adam, Pavel Rychly, Pavel Smrz et al. 2004. The Sketch Engine. In Proceedings of Euralex 2004, Lorient, France, 6-10 July, 105-116.
  • Kirby, Simon. 2007. The Evolution of Meaning-space Structure through Iterated Learning. In Proceedings of the Second International Symposium on the Emergence and Evolution of Linguistic Communication, University of Hertfordshire, 12-15 April, http://www.lel.ed.ac.uk/~simon/Papers/Kirby/kirby%20aisb%20v2.pdf (accessed 5th April 2015).
  • Martincorena, Iñigo, Aswin Seshasayee & Nicholas Luscombe. 2012. Evidence of non- random mutation rates suggests an evolutionary risk management strategy. Nature 485 (7396). 95-98. [WoS]
  • node. In Oxford English Dictionary. 2014.
  • Pagel, Mark. 2009. Human language as a culturally transmitted replicator. Nature reviews: genetics 10. 405-415. [WoS]
  • Sinclair, John. 1996. The search for units of meaning. Textus 9. 75-106.
  • Sinclair, John. 1998. The lexical item. In Edda Weigand (ed.) Contrastive Lexical Semantics. 1-24. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. [Crossref]
  • Swadesh, Morris. 1952. Lexico-statistic dating of prehistoric ethnic contacts. In Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 96(4). 453-463.
  • Williams, Geoffrey. 1998. Collocational networks: interlocking patterns of lexis in a corpus of plant biology research articles. International Journal of Corpus Linguistics 3(1). 151-171.
  • Wray, Alison. 2002. Formulaic Language and the Lexicon. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Wray, Alison. 2008. Formulaic Language: pushing the boundaries. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.doi-10_1515_opli-2015-0013
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