Since its first publication, Language Universals and Linguistic Typology has become established as the leading introductory account of one of the most productive areas of linguistics—the analysis, comparison, and classification of the common features and forms of the organization of languages. Adopting an approach to the subject pioneered by Greenberg and others, Bernard Comrie is particularly concerned with syntactico-semantic universals, devoting chapters to word order, case making, relative clauses, and causative constructions. His book is informed throughout by the conviction that an exemplary account of universal properties of human language cannot restrict itself to purely formal aspects, nor focus on analysis of a single language. Rather, it must also consider language use, relate formal properties to testable claims about cognition and cognitive development, and treat data from a wide range of languages. This second edition has been revised and updated to take full account of new research in universals and typology in the past decade, and more generally to consider how the approach advocated here relates to recent advances in generative grammatical theory.
Bernard Comrie Books







The Atlas of Languages
The Origin and Development of Languages Throughout the World
- 224 pages
- 8 hours of reading
An extremely authoritative writing style, full-color illustrations, and maps combine in this ultimate exploration of the evolution of languages.
Tense
- 152 pages
- 6 hours of reading
Exploring the diversity of tense systems, this book delves into how different languages express time and aspect. Bernard Comrie examines the structural variations and unique features of these systems, offering insights into linguistic patterns and their implications for understanding human communication. Through a comparative approach, readers gain a deeper appreciation of the complexities and nuances in the ways languages handle temporal expressions.
A Grammar of Akajeru
- 192 pages
- 7 hours of reading
A definitive guide to an almost extinct North Andamanese language. Originally spoken across the northern Andamanese Islands in the Bay of Bengal, the Akajeru language is spoken today by only three people. A Grammar of Akajeru describes this unique grammatical system as it was reported at the turn of the twentieth century. Based primarily on research conducted by Victorian anthropologists Alfred R. Radcliffe-Brown and Edward Horace Man, this book offers a linguistic analysis of all extant Akajeru material as well as the scant documentation of adjacent dialects Akabo and Akakhora. This volume includes a grammatical sketch of Akajeru, an English-Akajeru lexicon, and a comparison between Akajeru and present-day Andamanese.
The world's major languages
- 928 pages
- 33 hours of reading
This book describes the most interesting features of over 50 of the world's major languages and language groups.
De grote taalatlas
Oorsprong en ontwikkeling van taal en schrift in de gehele wereld
- 224 pages
- 8 hours of reading
