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Language(s):
eng - English
Dates:
2020-052020-06-26
Publication Status:
Issued
Pages:
992
Publishing info:
Oxford : Oxford University Press
Table of Contents:
Detailed Contents
Series Preface
List of Figures and Tables
List of Abbreviations
Romanization Conventions
The Contributors
Introduction, Martine Robbeets and Alexander Savelyev
Part I: Sources and Classification
A: Historical Sources and Periodization
1: Historical sources and periodization of the Japonic and Koreanic languages, Marc Miyake
2: The Altaic languages: Tungusic, Mongolic, Turkic, Volker Rybatzki
B: Genealogical Classification
3: The classification of the Transeurasian languages, Martine Robbeets
4: The classification of the Japonic languages, Elisabeth M. de Boer
5: The classification of the Korean language and its dialects, Kyou-Dong Ahn and Jaehoon Yeon
6: The classification of the Tungusic languages, Lindsay J. Whaley and Sofia Oskolskaya
7: The classification of the Mongolic languages, Hans Nugteren
8: The classification of the Turkic languages, Lars Johanson
9: A Bayesian approach to the classification of the Turkic languages, Alexander Savelyev
C: Typology
10: The typological heritage of the Transeurasian languages, Martine Robbeets
11: Typological profile of the Transeurasian languages from a quantitative perspective, Nataliia Hübler
Part II: Individual Structural Overviews
12: Japanese and the mainland dialects, Masayoshi Shibatani
13: Amami and Okinawa, the Northern Ryukyuan languages, Yuto Niinaga
14: Miyako, Ishigaki, and Yonaguni, the Southern Ryukyuan languages, John R. Bentley
15: Korean and the Korean dialects, Ho-min Sohn
16: Jejudo Korean, Ubong Shin, Jieun Kiaer, and Jiyoung Shin
17: Xibe and the Manchuric languages, Taeho Jang
18: Even and the Northern Tungusic languages, Brigitte Pakendorf and Natalia Aralova
19: Nanai and the Southern Tungusic languages, Sofia Oskolskaya
20: Dagur, Yohei Yamada
21: Khalkha Mongolian, Jan-Olof Svantesson
22: Oirat and Kalmyk, the Western Mongolic languages, Ágnes Birtalan
23: The northwestern Turkic (Kipchak) languages, Éva A. Csató and Lars Johanson
24: Turkish and the southwestern Turkic (Oghuz) languages, Jaklin Kornfilt
25: Uyghur and Uzbek, the southeastern Turkic languages, Abdurashid Yakup
26: Sakha and Dolgan, the North Siberian Turkic languages, Brigitte Pakendorf and Eugénie Stapert
27: Chuvash and the Bulgharic languages, Alexander Savelyev
Part III: Comparative Overviews
A: Phonology
28: A comparative approach to the consonant inventory of the Transeurasian languages, Allan R. Bomhard
29: A comparative approach to the vowel systems and harmonies in the Transeurasian languages and beyond, Andrew Joseph, Seongyeon Ko, and John Whitman
B: Morphology
30: A comparative approach to verbal morphology in Transeurasian, Martine Robbeets
31: A comparative approach to nominal morphology in Transeurasian: Case and plurality, Ilya Gruntov and Olga Mazo
32: A comparative approach to the pronominal system in Transeurasian, Michal Schwarz, Ondřej Srba, and Václav Blažzek
C: Syntax
33: The nominal group, possessive agreement, and nominal sentences in the Transeurasian languages, Irina Nevskaya and Lina Amal
34: Verbal categories in the Transeurasian languages, Andrej Malchukov and Patryk Czerwinski
35: Complex constructions in the Transeurasian languages, Andrej Malchukov and Patryk Czerwinski
D: Lexicon and Semantics
36: Basic vocabulary in the Transeurasian languages, Martine Robbeets
37: Numerals in the Transeurasian languages, Václav Blažzek
38: Kinship term paradigms in the Transeurasian languages, Milan van Berlo
Part IV: Areal Versus Inherited Connections
39: Contact between genealogically related languages: the case of Old Korean and Old Japanese, Alexander T. Francis-Ratte and J. Marshall Unger
40: Form and pattern borrowing across Siberian Turkic, Mongolic, and Tungusic languages, Gregory D. S. Anderson
41: Transeurasian as a continuum of diffusion, Edward Vajda
42: Beck-Wichmann-Brown evaluation of lexical comparisons for the Transeurasian proposal, Cecil H. Brown
Part V: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the Identity of Transeurasian
43: The homelands of the individual Transeurasian proto-languages, Martine Robbeets, Juha Janhunen, Alexander Savelyev, and Evgeniya Korovina
44: The Transeurasian homeland: Where, what and when?, Martine Robbeets
45: Transeurasian unity from a population genetic perspective, Choongwon Jeong, Chuan-Chao Wang, and Chao Ning
46: Transeurasian unity from an archaeological perspective, Tao Li
47: Language dispersals and the 'Secondary Peoples' Revolution': A historical anthropology of the Transeurasian unity, Mark James Hudson
References
Index
Rev. Type:
Peer
Identifiers:
ISBN: 9780198804628
Other: shh2592
DOI: 10.17617/2.3230368
Other: PL 43 OXF 2020
Degree:
-