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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter Mouton March 12, 2008

Frequency vs. iconicity in explaining grammatical asymmetries

  • Martin Haspelmath EMAIL logo
From the journal Cognitive Linguistics

Abstract

This paper argues that three widely accepted motivating factors subsumed under the broad heading of iconicity, namely iconicity of quantity, iconicity of complexity and iconicity of cohesion, in fact have no role in explaining grammatical asymmetries and should be discarded. The iconicity accounts of the relevant phenomena have been proposed by authorities like Jakobson, Haiman and Givón, but I argue that these linguists did not sufficiently consider alternative usage-based explanations in terms of frequency of use. A closer look shows that the well-known Zipfian effects of frequency of use (leading to shortness and fusion) can be made responsible for all of the alleged iconicity effects, and initial corpus data for a range of phenomena confirm the correctness of the approach.


*Contact address: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Deutscher Platz 6, 04103 Leipzig, Germany

Received: 2006-12-04
Revised: 2007-04-05
Published Online: 2008-03-12
Published in Print: 2008-02-01

© Walter de Gruyter

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