This monograph presents the first comprehensive diachronic account of
copular and passive verb constructions in Old and Middle English.
Peter Petré analyzes: · The mysterious loss of the high-frequency
verb weorðan 'become' as a casualty of changing word order in
narrative during Middle English. · The merger of is 'is' and bið
'shall be, is generally' into a single suppletive verb, and how it is
related to the development of a general analytic future shall be. ·
The co-occurrence of multiple changes that led to become and wax
crossing a threshold of similarity with existing copulas, from which
they analogically adopted full productivity in one fell swoop. In
explaining each of these changes, Petré goes beyond the level of the
verb and its complements, drawing attention to analogical networks and
the importance of a verb's embeddedness in clausal and textual
environments. Using a radically usage-based approach, treating syntax
as emerging from (changing) frequencies, Petré draws attention to
general principles of constructional change, including but not limited
to grammaticalization and lexicalization. He proposes novel
parallelisms between linguistic and ecological evolution. Going beyond
the view of language change as propagating only in social interaction,
Petré explains how each individual's mental grammar can be seen as a
dynamic ecosystem with hierarchical environments (clausal niches,
textual habitats). In this view, the interconnectedness of seemingly
unrelated changes, itself resulting from cognitive economy principles,
is arguably more decisive in lexical change than is functional
competition.
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Copular, Passive, and Related Constructions in Old and Middle English
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780199373406
Publisert
2020
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter