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Main Authors: Gfeller, Kim, Stoll, Sabine, Cathcart, Chundra, Widmer, Paul
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.13407
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author Gfeller, Kim
Stoll, Sabine
Cathcart, Chundra
Widmer, Paul
author_facet Gfeller, Kim
Stoll, Sabine
Cathcart, Chundra
Widmer, Paul
contents One of the most intriguing features of language is its constant change, with ongoing shifts in how meaning is expressed. Despite decades of research, the factors that determine how and why meanings evolve remain only partly understood. Colexification -- the phenomenon of expressing multiple distinct concepts using the same word form -- serves as a valuable window onto the dynamics of meaning change across languages. Here, we apply phylogenetic comparative models to dictionary data from three language families, Austronesian, Indo-European, and Uralic, in order to shed light on the evolutionary dynamics underlying the colexification of concept pairs. We assess the effects of three predictors: associativity, borrowability, and usage frequency. Our results show that more closely related concept pairs are colexified across a larger portion of the family tree and exhibit slower rates of change. In contrast, concept pairs that are more frequent and more prone to borrowing tend to change more rapidly and are less often colexified. We also find considerable differences between the language families under study, suggesting that areal and cultural factors may play a role.
format Preprint
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institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Investigating Lexical Change through Cross-Linguistic Colexification Patterns
Gfeller, Kim
Stoll, Sabine
Cathcart, Chundra
Widmer, Paul
Computation and Language
One of the most intriguing features of language is its constant change, with ongoing shifts in how meaning is expressed. Despite decades of research, the factors that determine how and why meanings evolve remain only partly understood. Colexification -- the phenomenon of expressing multiple distinct concepts using the same word form -- serves as a valuable window onto the dynamics of meaning change across languages. Here, we apply phylogenetic comparative models to dictionary data from three language families, Austronesian, Indo-European, and Uralic, in order to shed light on the evolutionary dynamics underlying the colexification of concept pairs. We assess the effects of three predictors: associativity, borrowability, and usage frequency. Our results show that more closely related concept pairs are colexified across a larger portion of the family tree and exhibit slower rates of change. In contrast, concept pairs that are more frequent and more prone to borrowing tend to change more rapidly and are less often colexified. We also find considerable differences between the language families under study, suggesting that areal and cultural factors may play a role.
title Investigating Lexical Change through Cross-Linguistic Colexification Patterns
topic Computation and Language
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.13407