Home Linguistics & Semiotics Some Functions of Shakespearian Word-Formation
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Some Functions of Shakespearian Word-Formation

  • Vivian Salmon
View more publications by John Benjamins Publishing Company
© 1987 John Benjamins Publishing Company

© 1987 John Benjamins Publishing Company

Chapters in this book

  1. Prelim pages i
  2. Table of contents v
  3. Preface ix
  4. Acknowledgements xi
  5. Introduction xiii
  6. I. Shakespeare and the English Language
  7. Shakespeare and the English Language 3
  8. Shakespeare and the Tune of the Time 23
  9. II. Aspects of Colloquial Elizabethan English
  10. Elizabethan Colloquial English in the Falstaff Plays 37
  11. The Social Background of Shakespeare's Malapropisms 71
  12. Shakespeare's Salutations 101
  13. Me, U, and Non-U 117
  14. III. Studies in Vocabulary
  15. (1) Some interpretations
  16. Propertied as All the Tuned Spheres 133
  17. The Spoken Language and the Dramatic Text 145
  18. ‘Thou’ and ‘You’ in Shakespeare 153
  19. “You” and “Thou” in Shakespeare's Richard III 163
  20. An Aspect of Shakespeare's Dynamic Language 181
  21. (2) Lexical innovation
  22. Some Functions of Shakespearian Word-Formation 193
  23. Shakespeare' Latinate Neologisms 207
  24. Latin-Saxon Hybrids in Shakespeare and the Bible 229
  25. (3) Shakespeare's use of specialised vocabularies
  26. Shakespeare and the ‘Ordinary’ Word 237
  27. Thieves' Cant in King Lear 245
  28. Legal Language in Coriolanus 255
  29. IV. Shakespeare and Elizabethan Grammar
  30. (1) Studies in syntax
  31. Sentence Structures in Colloquial Shakespearian English 265
  32. Pronominal Case in Shakespearean Imperatives 301
  33. The Perfect Auxiliaries in the Language of Shakespeare 309
  34. May and Might in Shakespeare's English 319
  35. Notes on the Use of the Ingressive Auxiliaries in the Works of William Shakespeare 329
  36. Multiple Negation in Shakespeare 339
  37. (2) Studies in inflection
  38. Shakespeare's Use of eth and es Endings of Verbs in the First Folio 349
  39. Shakespeare's Use of s Endings of the Verbs to do and to have in the First Folio 371
  40. V. Studies in Rhetoric and Metre
  41. Shakespeare's Use of Rhetoric 391
  42. Hendiadys and Hamlet 407
  43. The Iambic Pentameter Revisited 433
  44. VI. Punctuation
  45. Shakespearian Punctuation - A new beginning 445
  46. Repunctuation as Interpretation in Editions of Shakespeare 455
  47. VII. The Linguistic Context of Shakespearean Drama
  48. Shakespeare's view of Language 473
  49. The Poor Cat's Adage and other Shakespearean Proverbs in Elizabethan Grammar-School Education 489
  50. Language in Love's Labour's Lost 499
  51. Index 511
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