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Developments in English historical morpho-syntax / edited by Claudia Claridge, Birte Bös. — 1 online resource. — (Current issues in linguistic theory). — <URL:http://elib.fa.ru/ebsco/2140821.pdf>.Дата создания записи: 18.04.2019 Тематика: English language — Grammar, Historical.; English language — Morphosyntax.; LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / General Коллекции: EBSCO Разрешенные действия: –
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Оглавление
- DEVELOPMENTS IN ENGLISH HISTORICAL MORPHO-SYNTAX
- Editorial page
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Table of contents
- Introduction
- 1. Survey
- 2. Nominal constructions
- 3. Verbal constructions
- 4. Adverbs and adverbials
- References
- The dynamics of changes in the early English inflection: Evidence from the Old English nominal system
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Restructuring of the Old English nominal inflection: Major tendencies
- 3. Factors affecting the dynamics of changes in the nominal paradigms
- 3.1 Frequency of occurrence (use)
- 3.2 Morpho-phonological salience of inflectional exponents
- 3.3 Neutral forms and analogical pressure
- 3.4 Interaction between frequency and morpho-phonological salience
- 4. Conclusions
- References
- “Subsumed under the dative”?: The status of the Old English instrumental
- 1. Introduction
- 2. What is a “vestigial” case?
- 3. Distributional analysis: Frequencies and collexemes
- 3.1 Overview
- 3.2 Instrumental-case determiners
- 3.3 Instrumental-case adjectives
- 3.4 Interim synthesis and discussion
- 4. Fixed formulae or productive pattern?
- 5. What influences the degree to which the instrumental is used?
- 6. Conclusion: The instrumental as “vestigial”
- Acknowledgement
- References
- ‘Thone vpon thother’: On pronouns one and other with initial th- and t- in Middle English
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Setting the stage – The DP cycle and double articulation of definiteness
- 3. The pronouns tone/thone and tother/thother in ME
- 4. The origins of tone/thone and tother/thother
- 5. A correlation between reduced th’ and development of tone/thone and tother/thother
- 6. Toward an account of thone/thother and tone/tother
- 7. Conclusion
- Sources
- References
- Leveraging grammaticalization: The origins of Old Frisian and Old English
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Grammaticalization as a diagnostic tool
- 2.1 Comparing Old Frisian and Old English
- 2.2 Mechanisms of language change in contact and inheritance scenarios
- 2.3 Additional complications for related languages
- 2.4 Demystifying drift
- 2.5 Grammaticalization as a diagnostic tool
- 3. Test case 1: aga(n)
- 3.1 The grammaticalization of OE agan
- 3.2 Semantic layering: Intermediate stages and a semantic GSG
- 3.3 Another marker of intermediate stages: to
- 3.4 Infinitive inflections in aga’s complement
- 4. Test case 2: The participle-based complement
- 4.1 The participle-as-verb-complement: A potential GSG
- 4.2 Erosion in Old Frisian infinitive and participle endings
- 4.3 The distribution of Old Frisian infinitives
- 5. Conclusion
- Acknowledgement
- References
- Old English wolde and sceolde: A semantic and syntactic analysis
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Theoretical considerations: Modality and grammaticalization
- 3. Wolde and sceolde in Old English: Analysis of the data
- 4. Discussion of the results
- 4.1 wolde
- 4.2 sceolde
- 5. Conclusion
- References
- A corpus-based study on the development of dare in Middle English and Early Modern English
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The ancestors of the modal verbs and the status of dare, tharf and need in OE
- 2.1 Morphological features
- 2.2 Syntactic features
- 2.3 Semantics
- 3. Data and methodology
- 4. Blurred categorisation
- 5. Conclusions
- Primary sources
- References
- Counterfactuality and aktionsart: Predictors for BE vs. HAVE + past participle in Middle English
- 1. Development of periphrases with BE/HAVE + past participle in English
- 2. BE/HAVE + past participle with mutative intransitives in middle English – a case of auxiliary selection in the perfect?
- 3. Data and classification
- 4. Results and discussion
- 4.1 General results (N = 257)
- 4.2 Controlling for the “counterfactual effect”
- 4.3 Controlling for counterfactuality and aktionsart (N = 97)
- 4.4 Mixed-effects logistic regression analysis
- 5. Implications for different accounts of the BE/HAVE-periphrases
- 6. Conclusion
- References
- Conservatism or the influence of the semantics of motion situation in the choice of perfect auxiliaries in Jane Austen’s letters and novels
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1 Previous studies
- 1.2 The present study
- 1.3 Basic motion situation
- 1.4 Hypotheses
- 2. Method
- 3. Results
- 3.1 Motion situations in Jane Austen’s letters
- 3.2 Motion situations in Jane Austen’s novels
- 4. Letters versus novels
- 5. Conclusion
- References
- Appendix
- 1. Introduction
- Signs of grammaticalization: Tracking the get-passive through COHA
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1 Aim and scope
- 1.2 Grammaticalization and the get-passive
- 1.3 Parameters investigated in the present study
- 2. Material and methods
- 2.1 COHA
- 2.2 Data selection and retrieval
- 2.3 Classification of passives in the data sets
- 3. Results and discussion
- 3.1 Diachronic frequency of central and semi-passives in COHA
- 3.2 Situation type
- 3.3 Subject type
- 3.4 Frequent past participles in get- and be-passives
- 4. Conclusion
- Sources
- References
- Appendix
- 1. Introduction
- From time-before-place to place-before-time in the history of English: A corpus-based analysis of adverbial clusters
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Factors that motivate the order of adverbials in clusters – previous research and annotation of the data
- 3. Data and methodology
- 4. Results of the analyses
- 5. Discussion
- 5.1 Complements and their proximity to the lexical verb
- 5.2 Weight, realization form and the given-before-new principle
- 6. Conclusion
- References
- Appendix
- Variation and change at the interface of syntax and semantics: Concessive clauses in American English
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Theoretical background and previous research
- 2.1 Three semantic types of concessives
- 2.2 ‘Contrastive sequencing’
- 3. Methodology
- 4. Results
- 4.1 Semantics
- 4.2 Complement-internal syntax
- 4.3 Complement length
- 4.4 Multifactorial analysis of contrastive sequencing
- 5. Discussion, conclusion and outlook
- References
- Appendix
- Further explorations in the grammar of intensifier marking in Modern English
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Past and present participles
- 3. Predicative and attributive adjectives
- 4. Two kinds of adverbs
- 5. Prepositional phrases and NPs
- 6. Manner adverbs and adjectives
- 7. Concluding remarks
- References
- Electronic sources
- The rivalry between far from being + predicative item and its counterpart omitting the copula in Modern English
- 1. Setting the scene
- 2. Historical developments
- 2.1 Clausal type a involving adjectives in the narrative database and the OED
- 2.2 Other environments
- 3. Complexity constraints
- 3.1 Cognitive accessibility
- 3.2 The relevance of morphologically-based categories
- 3.3 Syntactic constraints in the language of present-day British newspapers
- 4. Comparing British and American English
- 4.1 Historical contrasts: The lag and overtake scenario
- 4.2 Some remaining contrasts: The present-day situation as reflected in large collections of British and American newspapers
- 5. Conclusion
- References
- Electronic corpora
- Index
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