Studies in Middle English Linguistics / / ed. by Jacek Fisiak.
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Superior document: | Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter DGBA Linguistics and Semiotics 1990 - 1999 |
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MitwirkendeR: | |
HerausgeberIn: | |
Place / Publishing House: | Berlin ;, Boston : : De Gruyter Mouton, , [2011] ©1997 |
Year of Publication: | 2011 |
Edition: | Reprint 2011 |
Language: | English |
Series: | Trends in Linguistics. Studies and Monographs [TiLSM] ,
103 |
Online Access: | |
Physical Description: | 1 online resource (621 p.) |
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Table of Contents:
- I-VI
- Preface
- Contents
- The development of an "impersonal" verb in Middle English: the case of behoove
- Double trouble: Geminate versus simplex graphs in the Ormulum
- Language and style in additions to The Canterbury Tales
- The Middle English creolization hypothesis revisited
- Infinitive marking in Late Middle English: Transitivity and changes in the English system of case
- From syntax to discourse: The function of object-verb order in Late Middle English
- Words in -ate and the history of English stress
- Assessing the relative status of languages in medieval Ireland
- Using the future to predict the past: Old English dialectology in the light of Middle English place-names
- When did Middle English begin? Later than you think!
- The Old English Anglian/Saxon boundary revisited
- Stress, survival and change: Old to Middle English
- Against the emergence of the nuclear stress rule in Middle English
- -ing-constructions in Middle English
- Concessive clauses in Chaucer's prose
- Middle English nonrestrictive expository apposition with an explicit marker
- On the beginning and development of the begin to construction
- The Peterborough Chronicle diphthongs
- Middle English phonetics: A systematic survey including notes on Irish and Welsh loanwords
- Quasi-impersonal verbs in Old and Middle English
- Like father (un)like son: a sociolinguistic approach to the language of the Cely family
- Whatever happened to the Middle English indefinite pronouns?
- Mutation, variation and selection in phonological evolution: A sketch based on the case of Late Middle English a > au/_ l{C/#}
- Handmade tales: The implications of linguistic variation in two early manuscripts of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales
- Middle (and Old) English prerequisites for the Great Vowel Shift
- Exclamations in Late Middle English
- Index of names
- Index of subjects