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Theory, typology and history of tense and aspect in Indo-European languages

What is it about?

This monograph analyzes the historical and prehistorical evolution of the verbal systems of the main branches of the Indo-European family of languages, concentrating primarily on the subsystems of tense and aspect. It consists of 19 chapters covering the languages with ancient documentation (Sanskrit, Ancient Greek, Latin, Hittite, Armenian, Gothic, Old English, Old Church Slavic) and the languages whose historical data are from a more recent date ( Hindi, Persian, Modern Greek, Lithuanian, Latvian, Czech, Russian, French, German and English). The last chapter is devoted to practical and theoretical conclusions of the work.

Why is it important?

This monograph presents a general picture of the evolution of Indo-European verbal systems within a coherent cognitive framework. Unlike more traditional studies of 'tense' (quite often not distinguishing carefully 'tense' from 'grammatical and 'lexical' aspect) both tense and aspect are related to underlying cognitive processes. It is shown that verbal systems have a staged development of time representations (chronogenesis). The authors view linguistic change as systemic and trace the evolution of the earlier tense/aspect systems by (a) aspectual split and (b) aspectual merger from the aspectual contrasts of Proto-Indo-European. The evidence for these systemic changes is seen clearly in the paradigmatic morphology of the daughter languages.

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The following have contributed to this page:
Vit Bubenik and john HEWSON
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