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What does the Jungle of Middle English Manuscripts Tell Us? On ME words for ‘every’ and ‘each’ with special reference to their many variants
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Leena Kahlas-Tarkka
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Prelim pages i
- Editors’ Foreword v
- Table of contents vii
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I. General Issues
- Linguistics, Philology, Chickens and Eggs 3
- Can Catastrophe Theory Provide Adequate Explanations for Linguistic Change? An application to syntactic change in English 17
- Postdisciplinary Philology 29
- Premisses and Periods in a History of English 37
- Linguistic Reality of Middle English 47
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II. Phonology and Writing
- Old English Stress 65
- The Great Vowel Shift Revisited 81
- Towards a Standard Written English? Continuity and change in the orthographic usage of John Capgrave, O.S.A. (1393–1464) 91
- On the Writing of the History of Standard English 105
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III. Morphology and Syntax
- Grammatical Choices in Old and Early Middle English 119
- Subject Extraction in English 131
- The Modals Again in the Light of Historical and Cross-Linguistic Evidence 145
- OE and ME Multiple Negation 157
- ø-relatives with Antecedent @ and Free Relatives in OE and ME 171
- Be vs. Have with Intransitives in Early Modern English 179
- Infinitive Marking in Early Modern English 191
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IV Lexicology and Semantics
- Dog — Man’s Best Friend 207
- Emotions in the English Lexicon 219
- The Scandinavian Element in the Vocabulary of the Peterborough Chronicle 235
- Productive or Non-productive? The Romance element in Middle English derivation 247
- Remarks on the Origin and Evolution of Abbreviations and Acronyms 261
- “Ase roser when hit redes” 273
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V. Varieties of English and Studies on Individual Texts
- Prototype Categories and Variation Studies 287
- What does the Jungle of Middle English Manuscripts Tell Us? On ME words for ‘every’ and ‘each’ with special reference to their many variants 305
- Ladies and gentlemen 317
- On the revolution of scientific writings from 1375 to 1675 329
- Multiple authorship of the OE Orosius 343
- “After a copye unto Me Delyverd” 353
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VI. Indexes
- Index nominum 367
- Index rerum 373
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Prelim pages i
- Editors’ Foreword v
- Table of contents vii
-
I. General Issues
- Linguistics, Philology, Chickens and Eggs 3
- Can Catastrophe Theory Provide Adequate Explanations for Linguistic Change? An application to syntactic change in English 17
- Postdisciplinary Philology 29
- Premisses and Periods in a History of English 37
- Linguistic Reality of Middle English 47
-
II. Phonology and Writing
- Old English Stress 65
- The Great Vowel Shift Revisited 81
- Towards a Standard Written English? Continuity and change in the orthographic usage of John Capgrave, O.S.A. (1393–1464) 91
- On the Writing of the History of Standard English 105
-
III. Morphology and Syntax
- Grammatical Choices in Old and Early Middle English 119
- Subject Extraction in English 131
- The Modals Again in the Light of Historical and Cross-Linguistic Evidence 145
- OE and ME Multiple Negation 157
- ø-relatives with Antecedent @ and Free Relatives in OE and ME 171
- Be vs. Have with Intransitives in Early Modern English 179
- Infinitive Marking in Early Modern English 191
-
IV Lexicology and Semantics
- Dog — Man’s Best Friend 207
- Emotions in the English Lexicon 219
- The Scandinavian Element in the Vocabulary of the Peterborough Chronicle 235
- Productive or Non-productive? The Romance element in Middle English derivation 247
- Remarks on the Origin and Evolution of Abbreviations and Acronyms 261
- “Ase roser when hit redes” 273
-
V. Varieties of English and Studies on Individual Texts
- Prototype Categories and Variation Studies 287
- What does the Jungle of Middle English Manuscripts Tell Us? On ME words for ‘every’ and ‘each’ with special reference to their many variants 305
- Ladies and gentlemen 317
- On the revolution of scientific writings from 1375 to 1675 329
- Multiple authorship of the OE Orosius 343
- “After a copye unto Me Delyverd” 353
-
VI. Indexes
- Index nominum 367
- Index rerum 373