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E-grāmata: Constructions and Environments: Copular, Passive, and Related Constructions in Old and Middle English [Oxford Scholarship Online E-books]

(Postdoctoral Fellow, KU Leuven)
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This monograph presents the first comprehensive diachronic account of copular and passive verb constructions in Old and Middle English. The mysterious loss of the high-frequency verb weorthan 'become' is explained as a casualty of changing word order in narrative during Middle English. The merger of is 'is' and bith 'shall be, is generally' into a single suppletive verb is related to the development of a general analytic future shall be. The co-occurrence of multiple changes 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, the book 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, Peter 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.
Acknowledgments xi
Abbreviations xiii
Chapter 1 Environmental Linguistics
1(23)
1.1 Toward a Happy Marriage of Philology and Linguistic Theory
1(1)
1.2 Topic and Scope
1(3)
1.3 Theoretical Framework and Notational Conventions
4(3)
1.4 Linguistic Ecosystems
7(13)
1.5 Research Questions and Hypotheses
20(2)
1.6 Structure of the Study
22(2)
Chapter 2 In Dialogue with Previous Studies
24(25)
2.1 Introduction
24(1)
2.2 Studies Related to (GE)WIERD
25(13)
2.3 Studies on the Distribution of BID and IS
38(11)
Chapter 3 Theory and Method
49(48)
3.1 Introduction
49(2)
3.2 Theoretical Framework
51(18)
3.3 Diachronic Application of the Theoretical Framework
69(16)
3.4 Methodological Considerations: Corpus Compilation and Data Extraction
85(12)
Chapter 4 The Past Tense
97(63)
4.1 Introduction
97(2)
4.2 Distribution and Competition of WEARD, GEWEARD and WÆS
99(40)
4.3 The Loss of the OE System of Boundedness and its Impact on (GE)WEARD
139(19)
4.4 Conclusions
158(2)
Chapter 5 The Present Tense
160(37)
5.1 Introduction
160(2)
5.2 Distribution, Competition and Merger of IS and BID
162(24)
5.3 Distribution and Competition of BID and (GE)WIERD and Loss of (GE)WIERD
186(9)
5.4 Conclusions
195(2)
Chapter 6 Copularization of BECUMED and WEAXED
197(30)
6.1 Introduction
197(1)
6.2 Productivity
198(2)
6.3 The Copularization of BECUMED
200(14)
6.4 The Copularization of WEAXED
214(10)
6.5 Summary and Theoretical Discussion
224(3)
Chapter 7 Evaluation of the Results
227(10)
7.1 Introduction
227(1)
7.2 Descriptive Results
228(2)
7.3 Theoretical Results
230(4)
7.4 Conclusion
234(3)
Appendix 1 List of Primary Sources Cited
237(2)
English
237(1)
Other Languages
237(2)
Latin
237(1)
Middle Welsh
238(1)
Old French
238(1)
Appendix 2 LEON-alfa
239(13)
Appendix 3 Data
252(33)
Notes
253(14)
References
267(18)
Studies and Works of Reference
267(15)
Corpora
282(1)
Dictionaries and Dictionary Entries
282(1)
Other Online Resources
283(2)
Index 285
Peter Petré holds a PhD in linguistics from the KU Leuven (University of Leuven). His research aims at keeping a wide view, combining insights and research methods from linguistics, history, philosophy, and research on evolutionary systems.