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Taaltypes

Taaltypes, or linguistic typology, is a field within linguistics that studies the structural features of languages in order to classify them into types. The aim is to describe cross-linguistic patterns and regularities rather than to prescribe rules for any particular language.

Typological classification often proceeds along two main axes: morphology and syntax. Morphological types include isolating languages

Phonological and other dimensions are also studied, such as tone versus non-tone systems, vowel inventories, and

Limitations: Typological classifications are descriptive and probabilistic, not rigid boxes; languages change over time and contact

(little
affixation,
such
as
Mandarin),
agglutinative
languages
(clear
affixes
per
morpheme,
such
as
Turkish),
fusional
languages
(morphemes
fuse
multiple
meanings,
such
as
Russian),
and
polysynthetic
languages
(complex
words
with
many
morphemes,
such
as
Inuktitut).
Syntactic
typology
considers
basic
word
order
(subject–verb–object,
subject–object–verb,
etc.),
and
alignment
(nominative–accusative
vs
ergative–absolutive).
Many
languages
exhibit
features
from
multiple
categories.
phonotactics.
Data
sources
include
field
studies
and
typological
databases
like
the
World
Atlas
of
Language
Structures
(WALS),
and
researchers
use
sample
languages
to
identify
patterns
and
universals.
can
blur
boundaries.
The
field
emphasizes
variation
and
aims
to
explain
why
certain
patterns
are
common
or
rare
rather
than
to
rank
languages.