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      On the sociolinguistic typology of linguistic complexity loss

      LD&C Special Publication
      University of Hawai'i Press

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          Abstract

          The nature of the human language faculty is the same the world over, and has been so ever since humans became human. This paper, however, considers the possibility that, because of the influence which social structure can have on language structure, this common faculty may produce structurally different types of language under different sociolinguistic conditions. Changing sociolinguistic conditions in the modern world are likely to have the consequence that, in time, the only languages remaining in the world will be severely atypical of how languages have been throughout most of human history.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          LD&C Special Publication
          University of Hawai'i Press
          978-0-9856211-0-0
          August 2012
          Article
          10125/4521
          21742faf-48be-4f94-ad79-22062ce53bea

          Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share Alike License

          History
          Funding
          National Foreign Language Resource Center

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