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      Systematic typological comparison as a tool for investigating language history

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      LD&C Special Publication
      University of Hawai'i Press

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          Abstract

          Similarities between languages can be due to 1) homoplasies because of a limited design space, 2) common ancestry, and 3) contact-induced convergence. Typological or structural features cannot prove genealogy, but they can provide historical signals that are due to common ancestry or contact (or both). Following a brief summary of results obtained from the comparison of 160 structural features from 121 languages (Reesink, Singer & Dunn 2009), we discuss some issues related to the relative dependencies of such features: logical entailment, chance resemblance, typological dependency, phylogeny and contact. This discussion focusses on the clustering of languages found in a small sample of 11 Austronesian and 8 Papuan languages of eastern Indonesia, an area known for its high degree of admixture.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          LD&C Special Publication
          University of Hawai'i Press
          978-0-9856211-2-4
          20 December 2012
          Article
          10125/4560
          096fdbc7-b77c-49ae-b058-efab8abe09a6

          Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 United States

          History
          Funding
          National Foreign Language Resource Center

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