The Routledge Studies in Hispanic and Lusophone Linguistics provides a showcase for the latest research and strands of current interests in these fields.
The series takes a multi-disciplinary approach, with titles focusing on core topics in the several areas of linguistics, such as sociolinguistics, area studies, language contact and variation, language research for the professions, and heritage languages. Through a discussion of data, problems, issues and possible solutions, books in the series combine theoretical and applied aspects of linguistic study.
Published in English, Spanish or Portuguese, titles in the series are intended for undergraduate and postgraduate students, teachers and researchers. They are also ideal for foreign language professionals returning to academic study and for program curricula. Proposals for the series will be welcomed by the Series Editor.
Edited
By Eva Núñez-Méndez
September 17, 2018
Biculturalism and Spanish in Contact: Sociolinguistic Case Studies provides an original and modern analysis of the development of Spanish and its contact with other languages using a sociolinguistic framework from both synchronic and diachronic angles. Split into three sections, (i) Border speech...
By Rachel Varra
April 20, 2018
Lexical Borrowing and Deborrowing in Spanish in New York City provides a sociodemographic portrait of lexical borrowing in Spanish in New York City. The volume offers new and important insights into research on lexical borrowing. In particular, it presents empirical data obtained through ...
Edited
By Melvin Gonzalez-Rivera
September 14, 2017
Current Research in Puerto Rican Linguistics is an edited collection of original contributions which explores the idiosyncratic grammatical properties of Puerto Rican Spanish. The book focuses on the structural aspects of linguistics, analysed with a variety of frameworks and methodological ...
Edited
By Sergi Torner Castells, Elisenda Bernal Gallen
December 08, 2016
This edited collection presents the state of the art in research related to lexical combinations and their restrictions in Spanish from a variety of theoretical approaches, ranging from Explanatory Combinatorial Lexicology to Distributed Morphology and Generative Lexicon Theory. Section 1 ...