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Categoriality in Language Change: The Case of the English Gerund: Oxford Studies in the History of English

Autor Lauren Fonteyn
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 8 mai 2019
This book presents the first serious attempt to set out a functional-semantic definition of diachronic transcategorial shift between the major classes noun/nominal and verb/clause. In English, speakers have different options to refer to an event, ranging from that-clauses (That he had guessed her size) over infinitives (For him to guess her size) and verbal gerunds (Him guessing her size) to nominal gerunds (His guessing of her size) and deverbal nouns (His guess of her size). Interestingly, not only do these strategies each resemble "prototypical" nominals to varying extents, but also some of these strategies increasingly resemble clauses and decreasingly resemble prototypical nominals over time, as if they are gradually shifting categories. Thus far, the literature that has dealt with such cases of diachronic categorial shift has mainly described the processes by focusing on form, leaving us with a clear picture of what and how changes have occurred. Yet, the question of why these formal changes have occurred is still shrouded in mystery. In this book, Lauren Fonteyn tackles this mystery by showing that the diachronic processes of nominalization and verbalization can also involve functional-semantic changes in two steps. First, building on functionalist and cognitive models of grammar, she offers a theoretical model of categoriality that allows us to study diachronic nominalization and verbalization not just as morphosyntactic but also as functional-semantic processes. Second, she offers more concrete, "workable" definitions of the abstract functional-semantic properties of the nominal and verbal/clausal class, which are subsequently applied to one of the most intriguing deverbal nominalization systems in the history of English: the English gerund.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780190917579
ISBN-10: 0190917571
Pagini: 232
Dimensiuni: 236 x 157 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Seria Oxford Studies in the History of English

Locul publicării:New York, United States

Recenzii

The aim of this book is to examine transcategorial shift between the nominal and verbal classes and develop a theoretical model to measure the relation between diachronic changes in a construction's degree of morphosyntactic categoriality and its degree of functional-semantic categoriality. This model is operationalized by applying it to the analysis of the English gerundive system, a network of related constructions that exhibit varying degrees of categorial hybridity. The volume is thus an excellent read for everyone interested in cognitive-functional linguistics in general, and diachronic linguistics in particular.
Through careful analysis, Lauren Fonteyn throws fresh light on the history of the English gerund. She paints a fascinating picture of interacting formal and functional changes, playing out within an evolving network of -ing-clauses and along a multi-layered noun-verb gradient. The upshot: form does not blindly follow function, or vice versa.
If noun and verb are the basic categories, English gerunds provide an excellent testing ground for category shifts. Fonteyn uses semantic, discourse and formal features, plus frequencies, to locate any pattern in relation to category prototypes. Adopting some exciting recent theoretical advances, she then offers a subtle diachronic account.

Notă biografică

Lauren Fonteyn is Assistant Professor in English Language and Linguistics at the University of Leiden.