59_[9783110305258 - Approaches] Languages.pdf

The findings to be presented in this paper were not anticipated, but came about as an unexpected result of looking at how the application of a version of the Levenshtein distance to word lists compares with cognate counting. We were interested in the degree to which the two correlate. The results of...

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Έκδοση: De Gruyter 2019
id oapen-20.500.12657-23713
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spelling oapen-20.500.12657-237132024-03-22T19:23:05Z Chapter Languages with longer words have more lexical change Wichmann, Søren Holman, Eric W. Saxena, Anju Borin, Lars Linguistic differences thema EDItEUR::C Language and Linguistics::CF Linguistics The findings to be presented in this paper were not anticipated, but came about as an unexpected result of looking at how the application of a version of the Levenshtein distance to word lists compares with cognate counting. We were interested in the degree to which the two correlate. The results of this investigation are intrinsically interesting and will be presented in the following section 2, but even more interesting is our finding that differences between counting cognates and measuring the Levenshtein distances vary as a function of average word lengths in the word lists compared. This observation will occupy the remainder of the paper, with section 3 devoted to establishing the statistical significance of the observation across language families, while section 4 establishes the significance within language groups, and section 5 discusses competing explanations. First we briefly explain the specific version of the Levenshtein distance used and the concept of cognate identification. 2019-11-19 23:55 2020-01-07 16:47:06 2020-04-01T09:26:39Z 2020-04-01T09:26:39Z 2013 chapter 1006431 OCN: 1135849104 9783110488081 http://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/23713 eng application/pdf n/a 59_[9783110305258 - Approaches] Languages.pdf De Gruyter Approaches to Measuring Linguistic Differences 10.1515/9783110305258.249 10.1515/9783110305258.249 2b386f62-fc18-4108-bcf1-ade3ed4cf2f3 d344d431-123c-48b3-94be-c8d10c495b20 7292b17b-f01a-4016-94d3-d7fb5ef9fb79 9783110488081 European Research Council (ERC) Berlin/Boston 295918 FP7 Ideas: European Research Council FP7-IDEAS-ERC - Specific Programme: "Ideas" Implementing the Seventh Framework Programme of the European Community for Research, Technological Development and Demonstration Activities (2007 to 2013) open access
institution OAPEN
collection DSpace
language English
description The findings to be presented in this paper were not anticipated, but came about as an unexpected result of looking at how the application of a version of the Levenshtein distance to word lists compares with cognate counting. We were interested in the degree to which the two correlate. The results of this investigation are intrinsically interesting and will be presented in the following section 2, but even more interesting is our finding that differences between counting cognates and measuring the Levenshtein distances vary as a function of average word lengths in the word lists compared. This observation will occupy the remainder of the paper, with section 3 devoted to establishing the statistical significance of the observation across language families, while section 4 establishes the significance within language groups, and section 5 discusses competing explanations. First we briefly explain the specific version of the Levenshtein distance used and the concept of cognate identification.
title 59_[9783110305258 - Approaches] Languages.pdf
spellingShingle 59_[9783110305258 - Approaches] Languages.pdf
title_short 59_[9783110305258 - Approaches] Languages.pdf
title_full 59_[9783110305258 - Approaches] Languages.pdf
title_fullStr 59_[9783110305258 - Approaches] Languages.pdf
title_full_unstemmed 59_[9783110305258 - Approaches] Languages.pdf
title_sort 59_[9783110305258 - approaches] languages.pdf
publisher De Gruyter
publishDate 2019
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