Description
The Cambridge Handbook of Language Contact: Volume 1 is a definitive resource exploring the intricate relationship between population movement and language change. This scholarly work brings together contributions from leading experts in historical linguistics, sociolinguistics, and contact linguistics to examine how migration, colonization, and demographic shifts shape linguistic systems.
The handbook addresses fundamental questions about how languages evolve when speakers from different linguistic backgrounds interact. It covers theoretical frameworks for understanding language contact, case studies from around the world, and methodological approaches to studying language change in contact situations. Topics include creolization, language mixing, borrowing patterns, grammatical innovation, and the long-term outcomes of sustained language contact.
Essential for researchers, linguists, and graduate students, this volume provides evidence-based analysis of how human mobility transforms languages and creates new linguistic varieties. It represents cutting-edge scholarship in understanding the dynamic processes that shape the world’s linguistic diversity.







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