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Medieval English and Its Heritage: Structure, Meaning and Mechanisms of Change: Studies in English Medieval Language and Literature, cartea 16

Editat de Nikolaus Ritt, Herbert Schendl, Christiane Dalton-Puffer, Dieter Kastovsky
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 31 aug 2006
The volume features new work in English historical linguistics. It focuses on Medieval Englishes, but also discusses how processes originating there continued to unfold in later stages of linguistic evolution. In language internal terms, it deals with phonological, morphological, lexical and syntactic constituents. At the same time, cognitive, pragmatic and social factors are taken into account. All contributions go back to papers delivered at the 13th International Conference of English Historical Linguistics, held at Vienna in 2004. They address central questions from new perspectives, report empirical findings, point out new directions for research, make new methods relevant for the historical study of English, manage to revise established views, and provide a good survey of issues currently discussed in the community of historical English linguists.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783631550069
ISBN-10: 3631550065
Pagini: 240
Ilustrații: num. fig. and graphs
Dimensiuni: 146 x 203 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.31 kg
Ediția:Nouă
Editura: Peter Lang Gmbh, Internationaler Verlag Der W
Seria Studies in English Medieval Language and Literature


Cuprins

Contents: Jeremy J. Smith: Phonaesthesia, Ablaut and the history of the English demonstratives - Christian Liebl: The A and O of a medieval English sound change: prolegomena to a study of the origins and early geographical diffusion of /??/ > /??/ - Julia Schlüter: A small word of great interest: the allomorphy of the indefinite article as a diagnostic of sound change from the sixteenth to nineteenth centuries - Philip Durkin: Loanword etymologies in the third edition of the OED: the benefits of the application of a consistent methodology for the scholarly user - Michael Bilynsky: Getting a diachronic view on synonymy: verbs and deverbatives - Ewa Ciszek: -dom in medieval English - Ferdinand von Mengden: The peculiarities of the OE numeral system - Letizia Vezzosi: From agen to own - Ilse Wischer: Grammaticalisation and language contact in the history of English: the evolution of the progressive form - W. Garrett Mitchener: A mathematical model of the loss of verb-second in Middle English - Päivi Pahta/Arja Nurmi: Code-switching in the Helsinki Corpus: a thousand years of multilingual practices - Tamás Eitler: Audience rules: interspeaker accomodation and intraspeaker syntactic variation in Late Middle English.