Why SOV might be initially preferred and then lost or recovered? A theoretical framework
This addresses a fundamental issue in linguistics for understanding word order diversity and evolution, but it is incremental as it builds on existing constraint-based theories.
The paper tackles the problem of why Subject-Object-Verb (SOV) word order is initially preferred and then lost or recovered in languages, presenting a theoretical framework that models word order as a multiconstraint satisfaction problem involving conflicts between online memory minimization and maximum predictability.
Little is known about why SOV order is initially preferred and then discarded or recovered. Here we present a framework for understanding these and many related word order phenomena: the diversity of dominant orders, the existence of free words orders, the need of alternative word orders and word order reversions and cycles in evolution. Under that framework, word order is regarded as a multiconstraint satisfaction problem in which at least two constraints are in conflict: online memory minimization and maximum predictability.