* Basic references
Croft, William. 2003. Typology and universals: Second edition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Dryer, Matthew S. 1989. Large linguistic areas and language sampling. Studies in Language 13: 257-292.
Dryer, Matthew S. 1998. Why statistical universals are better than absolute universals? Papers from the 33rd Annual Meeting of the Chicago Linguistics Society, 1-23.
Haspelmath, Martin. 2003. The geometry of grammatical meaning: Semantic maps and cross-linguistic comparison. In: Tomasello, Michael (ed.) The new psychology of language, vol. 2. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum. 211-242.
Haspelmath, Martin. 2010. Comparative concepts and descriptive categories in cross-linguistic studies. Language 86, 663-687.
Haspelmath, Martin, Matthew S. Dryer, David Gil & Bernard Comrie (eds.) 2005. The world atlas of language structures. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
* Further references
Aikhenvald, Alexandra Y. & R. M. W. Dixon. 1998. Dependencies between grammatical systems. Language 74, 56-80.
Comrie, Bernard. 1981. Language universals and linguistic typology: Syntax and morphology. Oxford: Blackwell.
Dressler, Wolfgang U. 1985. Typological aspects of natural morphology. Wiener Linguistische Gazette 35-36, 3-26 = Acta Linguistica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 35, 51-70.
Greenberg, Joseph H. 1954. A quantitative approach to the morphological typology of language. International Journal of American Linguistics 26, 178-194.
Greenberg, Joseph H. 1963. Some universals of grammar with particular reference to the order of meaningful elements. In: Greenberg, Joseph H. (ed.) Universals of language. 73-113. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press.
Haspelmath, Martin. 2006. Against markedness (and what to replace it with). Journal of Linguistics 42: 25-70.
Haspelmath, Martin. 2009. An empirical test of the Agglutination Hypothesis. In: Scalise, Sergio, Elisabetta Magni & Antonietta Bisetto (eds.) Universals of language today. Dordrecht: Springer. 13-29.
Haspelmath, Martin, Ekkehard König, Wulf Oestereicher & Wolfgang Raible (eds.) 2001. Language typology and language universals: An international handbook. Berlin/New York: Mouton de Gruyter.
Hawkins, John A. 1990. A parsing theory of word order universals. Linguistic Inquiry 21, 223-261.
Keenan, Edward L. & Bernard Comrie. 1977. Noun phrase accessibility and universal grammar. Linguistic Inquiry 8, 63-99.
Plank, Frans. 1998. The co-variation of phonology with morphology and syntax: a hopeful history. Linguistic Typology 2, 195-230.
Greenberg, Joseph H., Charles A. Ferguson & Edith A. Moravcsik (eds.) 1978. Universals of human language, Vol. 1: Method and theory. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
Mallinson, Graham & Barry J. Blake. 1981. Language typology: Cross-linguistic studies in syntax. Amsterdam: North-Holland.
Rijkhoff, Jan & Dik Bakker. 1998. Language sampling. Linguistic Typology 2, 262-314.
Sgall, Petr. 1971. On the notion “type of language”. Travaux linguistiques de Prague 4, 75-87.
Silverstein, Michael. 1976. Hierarchy of features and ergativity. In: Dixon, R. M. W. (ed.) Grammatical categories in Australian languages. 112-171. Canberra: Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies.
Skalička, Vladimír. 1935. Zur ungarischen Grammatik. Praha: Facultas Philosophica Universitatis Carolinae Pragensis.
Skalička, Vladimír. 1966. Ein “typologisches Konstrukt”. Travaux linguistiques de Prague 2, 157-164.
Skalička, Vladimír. 1977. Konstrukt-orientierte Typologie. Acta Universitatis Carolinae, Philologica 5, Linguistica generalia 1, 17-23.
Song, Jae Jung. 2001. Linguistic typology: Morphology and syntax. Harlow/London: Pearson Education.
Whaley, Lindsay J. 1997. Introduction to typology. London: Sage.
Poslední úprava: Elšík Viktor, Mgr., Ph.D. (19.09.2022)