Chapter 12. Verb particle combinations and word order change in Dutch-lexifier creole languages
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Robbert van Sluijs
, Pieter Muysken✝ and Bettelou Los
Abstract
This paper discusses the development and structural properties of verb + particle combinations in various creole languages for which Dutch was the main lexifier: Afrikaans, Berbice Dutch Creole, and Virgin Islands Dutch Creole (Negerhollands). In addition, it examines creole languages which have had substantial lexical influence from Dutch, such as Sranan, Ndyuka, and Papiamentu. The paper focuses on the interaction between grammatical patterns of object / verb order and lexical patterns involving verb + particle combinations.
Abstract
This paper discusses the development and structural properties of verb + particle combinations in various creole languages for which Dutch was the main lexifier: Afrikaans, Berbice Dutch Creole, and Virgin Islands Dutch Creole (Negerhollands). In addition, it examines creole languages which have had substantial lexical influence from Dutch, such as Sranan, Ndyuka, and Papiamentu. The paper focuses on the interaction between grammatical patterns of object / verb order and lexical patterns involving verb + particle combinations.
Chapters in this book
- 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
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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
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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
Chapters in this book
- 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