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Tuesday, May 13, 2008 | |
In fact, there are several good reasons why intelligent approaches to linguistic engineering and linguistic science should often diverge, and in more than two directions. A few of these reasons will be illustrated with two extended examples from the linguistic study of lexical tone: Yoruba enclitics and Mawukakan compounds.
The most superficial divergence, of course, is whether economically peripheral languages are a suitable object of study at all. A second difference concerns the potential interest of rare phenomena within a given language. Finally, in approaching the facts of language, the various language-related disciplines differ in the relative importance of the questions "how", "what" and "why".
Despite these differences, I suggest that both linguistic engineering and linguistic science have a common interest in fostering a modern form of traditional linguistic scholarship, and that both fields are moving in this direction for good (but different) reasons.
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