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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 June 2000
In his introduction, Campbell makes a case for the broader relevance of historical linguisticsby noting that observing what does and does not change in language contributes to “theunderstanding of universal grammar, language typology, and human cognition in general”(p. 2). The generativist perspective that phonological and syntactic changes are linked tolanguage acquisition, cited on page 236, illustrates one interface between historical linguisticsand general linguistic theory.