Chapter 10. The rise and fall of the passive auxiliary weorðan in the history of English
-
Gertjan Postma
Abstract
This paper gives a quantative analyisis of the dynamics of the passive auxiliary weorðan favouring passive BE in the history of English. Weorðan displays a rise-and-fall pattern rather than a decline pattern: it forms a peak, which is interpreted as a 'failed change'. This failed change turns out to be dynamically connected to another failed change: the rise-and-fall of strict V2 in Old English. The connection between strict V2 and the need of weorðan (and its counterparts) is considered: (1) language-internally in Dutch (dialects), (2) cross-linguistically in Romance and Germanic, (3) diachronically for Old and Middle-English. By using a Giorgi/Pianesi-style syntactic projection of Reichenbachian S,E,R-events, we provide a model that includes V2 and the passive diathesis, which predicts this correlation.
Abstract
This paper gives a quantative analyisis of the dynamics of the passive auxiliary weorðan favouring passive BE in the history of English. Weorðan displays a rise-and-fall pattern rather than a decline pattern: it forms a peak, which is interpreted as a 'failed change'. This failed change turns out to be dynamically connected to another failed change: the rise-and-fall of strict V2 in Old English. The connection between strict V2 and the need of weorðan (and its counterparts) is considered: (1) language-internally in Dutch (dialects), (2) cross-linguistically in Romance and Germanic, (3) diachronically for Old and Middle-English. By using a Giorgi/Pianesi-style syntactic projection of Reichenbachian S,E,R-events, we provide a model that includes V2 and the passive diathesis, which predicts this correlation.
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Acknowledgments ix
- Chapter 1. Introduction 1
-
Part I. Grammar change and information structure
- Chapter 2. From OV to VO in English 9
- Chapter 3. Word order and verb movement in Norwegian wh-questions 35
- Chapter 4. Conditional inversion and types of parametric change 57
- Chapter 5. Optional V2 in modern Afrikaans 79
-
Part II. The first position in a Verb-Second language
- Chapter 6. The information status of late subjects in passive main clauses in Old English 103
- Chapter 7. Position-related subject properties change in English 127
- Chapter 8. Split coordination in Early English 155
-
Part III. Verb-Second effects
- Chapter 9. Beowulf and Old English metre 187
- Chapter 10. The rise and fall of the passive auxiliary weorðan in the history of English 213
- Chapter 11. What comes second 241
-
Part IV. Particles in diachrony
- Chapter 12. Verb particle combinations and word order change in Dutch-lexifier creole languages 265
- Chapter 13. Parts and particles 291
- Chapter 14. Exploring the role of information structure in the word order variation of Old English verb-particle combinations 311
-
Part V. Contrasting V2 and Non-V2 information structure
- Chapter 15. The EFL teacher's nightmare 337
- Chapter 16. Common framework, local context, local anchors 353
- Index 371
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Acknowledgments ix
- Chapter 1. Introduction 1
-
Part I. Grammar change and information structure
- Chapter 2. From OV to VO in English 9
- Chapter 3. Word order and verb movement in Norwegian wh-questions 35
- Chapter 4. Conditional inversion and types of parametric change 57
- Chapter 5. Optional V2 in modern Afrikaans 79
-
Part II. The first position in a Verb-Second language
- Chapter 6. The information status of late subjects in passive main clauses in Old English 103
- Chapter 7. Position-related subject properties change in English 127
- Chapter 8. Split coordination in Early English 155
-
Part III. Verb-Second effects
- Chapter 9. Beowulf and Old English metre 187
- Chapter 10. The rise and fall of the passive auxiliary weorðan in the history of English 213
- Chapter 11. What comes second 241
-
Part IV. Particles in diachrony
- Chapter 12. Verb particle combinations and word order change in Dutch-lexifier creole languages 265
- Chapter 13. Parts and particles 291
- Chapter 14. Exploring the role of information structure in the word order variation of Old English verb-particle combinations 311
-
Part V. Contrasting V2 and Non-V2 information structure
- Chapter 15. The EFL teacher's nightmare 337
- Chapter 16. Common framework, local context, local anchors 353
- Index 371