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How Many Possible Languages Are There?

BORTOLUSSI, LUCA
•
SGARRO, ANDREA
•
LONGOBARDI, Giuseppe
•
Guardiano C.
2011
  • book part

Abstract
We adopt a description of natural languages in terms of strings of crosslinguistically variable syntactic features (parameters), complying with a specified hypothesis of “universal grammar”, and we deal with two problems: first, assessing the statistical significance of language distances calculated on the basis of such features and recently used to reconstruct phylogenetic trees; second, counting the minimal overall number of possible human languages, i.e. of strings satisfying the implicational rules which describe dependencies between parameters of the specified universal grammar. In order to accomplish these tasks, we had to develop a sampling algorithm capable of dealing correctly with such rules. The potential significance of these results for historical and theoretical linguistics is then briefly highlighted.
DOI
10.3233/978-1-60750-762-8-168
WOS
WOS:000329748200014
Archivio
http://hdl.handle.net/11368/2363380
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/scopus/2-s2.0-79960121927
http://www.booksonline.iospress.nl/Content/View.aspx?piid=20097
Diritti
metadata only access
Soggetti
  • Universal Grammar

  • Montecarlo sampling

  • language phyogeny

Web of Science© citazioni
12
Data di acquisizione
Mar 27, 2024
google-scholar
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