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From Shakespeare to Present-Day American English: The survival of ‘get + (XP) + gone’ constructions
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Lynn D. Sims
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction 1
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I. Particularizing and generalizing for written records
- A philological tour of HEL 11
- From stop-fricative clusters to contour segments in Old English 29
- On the regrettable dichotomy between philology and linguistics: Historical lexicography and historical linguistics as test cases 61
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II. Particulars of authorship
- The history of the English language and the history of English literature 93
- “Of harmes two, the lesse is for to chese”: An integrated OT-Maxent approach to syntactic inversions in Chaucer’s verse 107
- The effect of representativeness and size in historical corpora: An empirical study of changes in lexical frequency 131
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III. Particulars of communicative setting
- Seeing is believing: Evidentiality and direct visual perception verbs in Early Modern English witness depositions 153
- Sincerity and the moral reanalysis of politeness in Late Modern English: Semantic change and contingent polysemy 173
- Something to write home about: Socialnetwork maintenance in the correspondence of nineteenth-century Scottish emigrants 203
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IV. Particularizing from words
- Words swimming in sound change 225
- Plural marking in the Old and Middle English nd-stems feond and freond 239
- From Shakespeare to Present-Day American English: The survival of ‘get + (XP) + gone’ constructions 263
- Index 283
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Table of contents v
- Introduction 1
-
I. Particularizing and generalizing for written records
- A philological tour of HEL 11
- From stop-fricative clusters to contour segments in Old English 29
- On the regrettable dichotomy between philology and linguistics: Historical lexicography and historical linguistics as test cases 61
-
II. Particulars of authorship
- The history of the English language and the history of English literature 93
- “Of harmes two, the lesse is for to chese”: An integrated OT-Maxent approach to syntactic inversions in Chaucer’s verse 107
- The effect of representativeness and size in historical corpora: An empirical study of changes in lexical frequency 131
-
III. Particulars of communicative setting
- Seeing is believing: Evidentiality and direct visual perception verbs in Early Modern English witness depositions 153
- Sincerity and the moral reanalysis of politeness in Late Modern English: Semantic change and contingent polysemy 173
- Something to write home about: Socialnetwork maintenance in the correspondence of nineteenth-century Scottish emigrants 203
-
IV. Particularizing from words
- Words swimming in sound change 225
- Plural marking in the Old and Middle English nd-stems feond and freond 239
- From Shakespeare to Present-Day American English: The survival of ‘get + (XP) + gone’ constructions 263
- Index 283