Chapter 6. The development of gender and countability effects in German ung - and English ing -nominals
-
Martina Werner
Abstract
Although German ung- and English ing-nouns developed from a common Germanic origin, the two nominalization types exhibit surprisingly different aspectual and countability properties in present-day German and present-day English. Diachronically, one of the most prominent differences between the two languages is the loss of grammatical gender as a marker of countability in English versus its re-grammaticalization in the form of derivational suffixes in German. In this paper, we show how this particular difference explains the unexpected development of ing, which, instead of specializing for result-oriented countable readings of the deverbal nominal, like ung did, came to specialize for process-oriented uncountable/mass denotations of events. The paper discusses the influence of gender on ung/ing-nominals, its particular morphosyntactic consequences, and its implications for present-day differences between the two languages.
Abstract
Although German ung- and English ing-nouns developed from a common Germanic origin, the two nominalization types exhibit surprisingly different aspectual and countability properties in present-day German and present-day English. Diachronically, one of the most prominent differences between the two languages is the loss of grammatical gender as a marker of countability in English versus its re-grammaticalization in the form of derivational suffixes in German. In this paper, we show how this particular difference explains the unexpected development of ing, which, instead of specializing for result-oriented countable readings of the deverbal nominal, like ung did, came to specialize for process-oriented uncountable/mass denotations of events. The paper discusses the influence of gender on ung/ing-nominals, its particular morphosyntactic consequences, and its implications for present-day differences between the two languages.
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction 1
-
Part I. Phonology
- Chapter 1. Old Irish consonant quality re-examined 11
- Chapter 2. The use of the past to explain the past 27
- Chapter 3. Pertinacity in loanwords 57
-
Part II. Morphology
- Chapter 4. Ablaut in Armenian nasal declension 77
- Chapter 5. Gender and declension mismatches in West Nordic 97
- Chapter 6. The development of gender and countability effects in German ung - and English ing -nominals 115
- Chapter 7. Where do Italian - ata nouns come from? 133
- Chapter 8. Diachrony and morphological equilibrium 149
- Chapter 9. Anti-relevant, contra-iconic but system-adequate 171
-
Part III. Morphosyntax
- Chapter 10. Impersonal passives and the suffix - r in the Indo-European languages 187
- Chapter 11. The Old English verbal prefixes for- and ge- 217
-
Part IV. Syntax
- Chapter 12. Enclitic -( m ) a ‘but’ / -( y ) a ‘and’ in Hittite 245
- Chapter 13. State representation and dynamic processes in Homeric Greek 271
- Chapter 14. Effecting a change 287
- Chapter 15. Early Indo-European dialects and innovations of aspect systems 301
- Chapter 16. Perfecting the notion of Sprachbund 319
- Chapter 17. Parameters in the development of Romance perfective auxiliary selection 343
- Chapter 18. Adverbs and the left periphery of non-finite clauses in Old Spanish 385
-
Part V. Diachronic typology
- Chapter 19. The sources of antipassive constructions 405
- Chapter 20. A diachronic account of converbal constructions in Old Rajasthani 423
-
Part VI. Semantics and pragmatics
- Chapter 21. The locative alternation with spray/load verbs in Old English 445
- Chapter 22. Penetration of French-origin lexis in Middle English occupational domains 459
- Chapter 23. Meaning change from superlatives to definite descriptions 479
- Chapter 24. Towards diachronic word classes universals 501
- Chapter 25. Grammaticalizing the face in a first generation sign language 519
-
Part VII. Language contact, variation and diffusion
- Chapter 26. Linguistic divergence under contact 563
- Chapter 27. Roots and branches of variation across dialects of English 593
- Chapter 28. Waves in computer simulations of linguistic diffusion 615
- Index 631
- Language index 637
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction 1
-
Part I. Phonology
- Chapter 1. Old Irish consonant quality re-examined 11
- Chapter 2. The use of the past to explain the past 27
- Chapter 3. Pertinacity in loanwords 57
-
Part II. Morphology
- Chapter 4. Ablaut in Armenian nasal declension 77
- Chapter 5. Gender and declension mismatches in West Nordic 97
- Chapter 6. The development of gender and countability effects in German ung - and English ing -nominals 115
- Chapter 7. Where do Italian - ata nouns come from? 133
- Chapter 8. Diachrony and morphological equilibrium 149
- Chapter 9. Anti-relevant, contra-iconic but system-adequate 171
-
Part III. Morphosyntax
- Chapter 10. Impersonal passives and the suffix - r in the Indo-European languages 187
- Chapter 11. The Old English verbal prefixes for- and ge- 217
-
Part IV. Syntax
- Chapter 12. Enclitic -( m ) a ‘but’ / -( y ) a ‘and’ in Hittite 245
- Chapter 13. State representation and dynamic processes in Homeric Greek 271
- Chapter 14. Effecting a change 287
- Chapter 15. Early Indo-European dialects and innovations of aspect systems 301
- Chapter 16. Perfecting the notion of Sprachbund 319
- Chapter 17. Parameters in the development of Romance perfective auxiliary selection 343
- Chapter 18. Adverbs and the left periphery of non-finite clauses in Old Spanish 385
-
Part V. Diachronic typology
- Chapter 19. The sources of antipassive constructions 405
- Chapter 20. A diachronic account of converbal constructions in Old Rajasthani 423
-
Part VI. Semantics and pragmatics
- Chapter 21. The locative alternation with spray/load verbs in Old English 445
- Chapter 22. Penetration of French-origin lexis in Middle English occupational domains 459
- Chapter 23. Meaning change from superlatives to definite descriptions 479
- Chapter 24. Towards diachronic word classes universals 501
- Chapter 25. Grammaticalizing the face in a first generation sign language 519
-
Part VII. Language contact, variation and diffusion
- Chapter 26. Linguistic divergence under contact 563
- Chapter 27. Roots and branches of variation across dialects of English 593
- Chapter 28. Waves in computer simulations of linguistic diffusion 615
- Index 631
- Language index 637