Studies in the History of the English Language VII : : Generalizing vs. Particularizing Methodologies in Historical Linguistic Analysis / / ed. by Don Chapman, Colette Moore, Miranda Wilcox.

This book looks at how historical linguists accommodate the written records used for evidence. The limitations of the written record restrict our view of the past and the conclusions that we can draw about its language. However, the same limitations force us to be aware of the particularities of lan...

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Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter DG Plus DeG Package 2016 Part 1
MitwirkendeR:
HerausgeberIn:
Place / Publishing House:Berlin ;, Boston : : De Gruyter Mouton, , [2016]
©2016
Year of Publication:2016
Language:English
Series:Topics in English Linguistics [TiEL] , 94
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (VI, 290 p.)
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Table of Contents:
  • Frontmatter
  • Table of contents
  • Introduction
  • I. Particularizing and generalizing for written records
  • A philological tour of HEL
  • From stop-fricative clusters to contour segments in Old English
  • On the regrettable dichotomy between philology and linguistics: Historical lexicography and historical linguistics as test cases
  • II. Particulars of authorship
  • The history of the English language and the history of English literature
  • “Of harmes two, the lesse is for to chese”: An integrated OT-Maxent approach to syntactic inversions in Chaucer’s verse
  • The effect of representativeness and size in historical corpora: An empirical study of changes in lexical frequency
  • III. Particulars of communicative setting
  • Seeing is believing: Evidentiality and direct visual perception verbs in Early Modern English witness depositions
  • Sincerity and the moral reanalysis of politeness in Late Modern English: Semantic change and contingent polysemy
  • Something to write home about: Socialnetwork maintenance in the correspondence of nineteenth-century Scottish emigrants
  • IV. Particularizing from words
  • Words swimming in sound change
  • Plural marking in the Old and Middle English nd-stems feond and freond
  • From Shakespeare to Present-Day American English: The survival of ‘get + (XP) + gone’ constructions
  • Index