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Constructions, Networks and Linguistic Change

Expected online publication date:  26 February 2026

Graeme Trousdale
Affiliation:
The University of Edinburgh
Elizabeth Closs Traugott
Affiliation:
Stanford University

Summary

The topic of linguistic networks unites different frameworks in cognitive linguistics. This Element explores two approaches to networks, specifically Construction Grammar of the Goldberg variety and Word Grammar as developed by Hudson, and how they inform work on language change. Both are usage-based theories, but while the basic units of Construction Grammar are conventionalized form-meaning pairings gathered in a construct-i-con, the basic units of Word Grammar are words in dependency and other relations. Construction Grammar allows for schematic, hierarchized abstract generalizations attributable to social groups, whereas Word Grammar focuses on relations at the micro-level and attributable primarily to individuals. Consequences of the differences are discussed with reference to perspectives on the diachronic development of causal connectives in English, especially because.

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Element
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Online ISBN: 9781009523776
Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Accessibility standard: Unknown

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Constructions, Networks and Linguistic Change
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Constructions, Networks and Linguistic Change
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Constructions, Networks and Linguistic Change
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