Linguistic rights

Language laws are in linguistics or linguistics general statements about states or processes of change the language.

From the perspective of Quantitative Linguistics is this to be laws that are derived from theoretical assumptions and empirical sufficiently checked and are in interaction with other laws. They must be clear of language rules differ as empirical generalizations. Probably the most famous is the so-called Zipf law. Further examples of such language laws can be found in the article Quantitative Linguistics.

According to laws against fulfill these conditions only partially and are more empirical generalizations.

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