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ROLE OF TYPOLOGY IN OTHER PARTS OF LINGUISTICS. - Coggle Diagram
ROLE OF TYPOLOGY IN OTHER PARTS OF LINGUISTICS.
Linguistic typology is the study the ways in which the languages of the world vary in their patterns. It is concerned with discovering what grammatical patterns are common to many languages and which ones are rare
Linguistic typology is contrasted with genealogical linguistics on the grounds that typology groups languages or their grammatical features based on formal similarities rather than historic descendence.
More developed nineteenth-century comparative works include Franz Bopp's 'Conjugation System' (1816) and Wilhelm von Humboldt's ‘On the Difference in Human Linguistic Structure and Its Influence on the Intellectual Development of Mankind’ (posthumous 1836).
Linguistic Typology is the analysis, comparison, and classification of languages according to their common structural features and forms. This is also called cross-linguistic typology.
The branch of linguistics that "studies the structural similarities between languages, regardless of their history, as part of an attempt to establish a satisfactory classification, or typology, of languages" is known as typological linguistics
The three basic classifications for languages of the world are:
Genealogical.
Typological.
Areal.
Topology is a method of forming linguistic theory This means that it is a method of language analysis that establishes a linguistic theory different from other methods. In the meantime, the ideas and propositions should be closely associated with functional linguistics.
Language criteria
Historical criteria
Geographical criteria
Sociopolitical criteria
Prepared by BEGIMOVA SUG'DIYONA
The three basic classifications for languages of the world are:
Genealogical
Typological
Areal
Indo-European. The Indo-European language family includes 448 languages, the most prominent of which are the dominant languages spoken across North America, Europe, South America, and parts of Asia. ...
Sino-Tibetan. ...
Niger-Congo. ...
Afro-Asiatic. ...
Austronesian. ...
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