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Studies in historical Ibero-Romance morpho-syntax: a descriptive and prescriptive analysis / edited by Miriam Bouzouita, Ioanna Sitaridou and Enrique Pato. — 1 online resource. — (Issues in Hispanic and Lusophone linguistics). — <URL:http://elib.fa.ru/ebsco/1837381.pdf>.Дата создания записи: 27.12.2017 Тематика: Romance languages — Morphosyntax.; Romance languages — Grammar, Historical.; FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY / French; FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY / Romance Languages (Other); Romance languages — Grammar, Historical. Коллекции: EBSCO Разрешенные действия: –
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Оглавление
- Studies in Historical Ibero-Romance Morpho-Syntax
- Editorial page
- Title page
- LCC data
- Table of contents
- 1. Some introductory reflections
- 1. General overview
- 2. Individual contributions
- 3. Coda
- Reference
- 2. Velar allomorphy in Ibero-Romance
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Brief explanation as to the origin of velar allomorphy in Ibero-Romance
- 3. Velar allomorphy in Old Spanish A purely morphological/morphomic account based on allomorphic endings
- 4. Evidence for the velar element being morphologically parsed as belonging to the inflectional endings in Old Spanish but then possibly part of the root in Modern Spanish
- 5. The N-pattern morphome
- 6. The clash of the morphomes
- 6.1 The creation of the L>>N-pattern
- 7. Conclusions and implications
- 7.1 Conclusion
- References
- Appendix
- 155 in total
- 3. The history of concatenative compounds in Spanish
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Background
- 2.1 Concatenative compounding in historical perspective
- 2.2 The Latin origins of the linking vowel -i-
- 3. Concatenative compounding in Spanish
- 3.1 Types of concatenative compounds
- 3.2 History of concatenative compounds in Spanish
- 4. Methodology: Sources, data collection, classification and quantification
- 5. Findings
- 5.1 Frequency of structural patterns in Spanish concatenative compounds
- 5.2 Structural variability of concatenative compounds
- 5.3 Historical relationship between concatenative compound variants
- 6. An alternative hypothesis
- 7. Conclusions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- 4. Intersubjectification and textual emphasis in the use of definite article + proper name in Spanish
- 1. Introduction
- 2. From the Latin distal demonstrative ille to the definite article
- 3. Definite article + proper name in present-day Spanish
- 4. The definite article as a marker of discourse prominence
- 5. The recognitional use of definite article + proper name
- 6. Conclusions
- References
- Corpus
- 5. Stylistic fronting in Old Spanish texts
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Textual evidence
- 2.1 Subject gap
- 2.2 Initial position in main sentences
- 2.3 Subordinate sentences
- 3. Focus meaning?
- 4. Stylistic fronting in main clauses
- 5. Split phrases and analytical futures
- 6. Stylistic fronting in subordinate clauses
- 7. Summary and conclusions
- References
- Corpus
- 6. The dative experiencer of Spanish gustar
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The historical development of gustar
- 2.1 The physical sense of taste
- 2.2 Extension to the mental world
- 2.3 The syntactic shift
- 3. Construals of mental events
- 3.1 Gustar vs.amar
- 3.2 Gustar vs. querer
- 3.3 Gustar and placer
- 4. The change and its motivation
- 4.1 The initial contexts
- 4.2 Generalisation of the dative construction with gustar
- 5. The ‘liking’ verbs with a human stimulus
- 6. Conclusions
- References
- Corpus
- 7. Postverbal subjects of unaccusative verbs in the history of Portuguese
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Theoretical assumptions
- 3. Methodology
- 4. Previous descriptions of Portuguese historical syntax
- 5. Subject and object positions in the history of Portuguese
- 5.1 Subject positions with transitive and inergative verbs
- 5.2 Postverbal object positions with transitive verbs
- 5.3 Subject order with unaccusative verbs
- 6. Statistical analysis
- 7. Summary and conclusion
- References
- Corpus
- 8. On the position of overt subjects in infinitival clauses in Spanish and Portuguese
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Overt subjects in Spanish and Portuguese infinitival clauses
- 2.1 Present-day distribution
- 2.2 The Portuguese inflected infinitive
- 3. The position of the overt subject in relation to the infinitive
- 3.1 A general overview
- 3.1.1 Spanish
- 3.1.2 Portuguese
- 3.2 The position of pronominal subjects of infinitives in Portuguese adverbial clauses
- 3.2.1 Modern Portuguese
- 3.2.2 Portuguese in diachrony
- 3.3 The position of pronominal subjects of infinitives in Spanish adverbial clauses
- 3.3.1 Modern Peninsular Spanish
- 3.3.2 Spanish in diachrony
- 3.1 A general overview
- 4. Conclusions
- References
- Corpus
- 9. Allative to purposive grammaticalisation
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Data
- 3. Chunking: para < pora < por + a
- 3.1 Frequency and fusion
- 3.2 Precursors, variant forms and palaeographic abbreviations
- 4. Compositionality of para, and its loss
- 5. Early allative use: Distributions of the preposition across its contexts of use
- 6. Rising purposive: Variation between para and por with infinitives
- 7. Conclusion: A path and process of grammaticalisation
- References
- Corpus
- 10. Recurrent processes in the evolution of concessive subordinators in Spanish and Catalan
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Main properties of concessive constructions
- 2.1 Concessives as semantically complex constructions
- 2.2 Other properties of concessive constructions
- 2.3 Lexical and grammatical sources of concessives
- 3. Spanish aunque/Catalan encara que: From conditional concessive to adversative
- 3.1 Scalar adverbs in the development of concessive conjunctions
- 3.2 From aun + que ‘even + that’ to aunque ‘although’
- 3.3 Final stages in the grammaticalisation of aunque
- 3.4 Catalan encara que
- 4. From causal to concessive (and vice versa?)
- 4.1 Spanish por más que/Catalan per més que: From causal to concessive value
- 4.2 Spanish puesto que: From concessive to causal?
- 5. Conclusions
- References
- Spanish corpus
- Catalan corpus
- 11. Si as a Q-particle in Old Spanish
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Interrogative constructions in Romance
- 3. The evolution of interrogative structures: From Latin to Romance
- 4. Interrogative si in the history of Spanish
- 5. Interrogative si in Medieval Romance
- 6. The grammaticalisation of Q-particles
- 7. Conclusions
- References
- 12. Realmente, verdaderamente and ciertamente
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Methodology
- 3. Verdaderamente, realmente and ciertamente as verbal adverbs
- 4. Verdaderamente, realmente and ciertamente as sentence adverbs
- 5. Verdaderamente, realmente and ciertamente as discourse markers
- 6. The development of a new adverbial function: Verdaderamente, realmente and ciertamente as intensifying adverbs
- 6.1 Chronology and distribution
- 6.2 Extension of the adjective modifier function
- 7. Conclusion
- References
- Corpus
- 13. Variation and the use of discourse markers in 16th-century Spanish
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Methodology
- 3. Analysis
- 3.1 Commentator ‘pues’
- 3.2 Ordering markers
- 3.2.1 Opening and continuity markers
- 3.2.2 ‘Mayormente’ and ‘especialmente’
- 3.2.3 Spatial order markers
- 3.2.4 Other continuity markers
- 3.2.5 Closure markers
- 3.3 Consecutive connectors
- 3.3.1 ‘pues’
- 3.3.2 ‘así’
- 4. Conclusions
- References
- Corpus
- 14. Studying Ibero-Romance before 1200
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Early Romance
- 3. Early Ibero-Romance
- References
- Index
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