SOC-PHCLAug 12, 2014

Internal and external dynamics in language: Evidence from verb regularity in a historical corpus of English

arXiv:1408.2699v148 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of understanding rule-governed systems with exceptions in linguistics, providing insights into language evolution, but it is incremental as it builds on existing debates.

The study investigated why irregular verbs persist in English despite pressures to regularize, using the Corpus of Historical American English, and found that the overall amount of irregularity remains roughly constant over time despite vocabulary growth.

Human languages are rule governed, but almost invariably these rules have exceptions in the form of irregularities. Since rules in language are efficient and productive, the persistence of irregularity is an anomaly. How does irregularity linger in the face of internal (endogenous) and external (exogenous) pressures to conform to a rule? Here we address this problem by taking a detailed look at simple past tense verbs in the Corpus of Historical American English. The data show that the language is open, with many new verbs entering. At the same time, existing verbs might tend to regularize or irregularize as a consequence of internal dynamics, but overall, the amount of irregularity sustained by the language stays roughly constant over time. Despite continuous vocabulary growth, and presumably, an attendant increase in expressive power, there is no corresponding growth in irregularity. We analyze the set of irregulars, showing they may adhere to a set of minority rules, allowing for increased stability of irregularity over time. These findings contribute to the debate on how language systems become rule governed, and how and why they sustain exceptions to rules, providing insight into the interplay between the emergence and maintenance of rules and exceptions in language.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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