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Coordinate deletion, directionality and underlying structure in Old English

  • Rodrigo Pérez Lorido
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Generative Theory and Corpus Studies
This chapter is in the book Generative Theory and Corpus Studies

Chapters in this book

  1. I-IV I
  2. Preface V
  3. Contents XVII
  4. 1. Structure
  5. 1.1. Continuity versus discontinuity 1
  6. Obsolescence and sudden death in syntax: The decline of verb-final order in early Middle English 3
  7. On the history of relative that 27
  8. The complementation of verbs of appearance by adverbs 53
  9. On the use of current intuition as a bias in historical linguistics: The case of the LOOK + -ly construction in English 77
  10. The indefinite pronoun man: “nominal“ or “pronominal”? 103
  11. 1.2. Form and function 123
  12. Coordinate deletion, directionality and underlying structure in Old English 125
  13. The position of the adjective in Old English 153
  14. On the history of the s-genitive 183
  15. The passive as an object foregrounding device in early Modern English 211
  16. Reinforcing adjectives: A cognitive semantic perspective on grammaticalisation 233
  17. 2. Text types
  18. Variation and change: Text types and the modelling of syntactic change 261
  19. The progressive form and genre variation during the nineteenth century 283
  20. The conjunction and in early Modern English: Frequencies and uses in speech-related writing and other texts 299
  21. 3. Sociolinguistics and dialectology
  22. Processes of supralocalisation and the rise of Standard English in the early Modern period 329
  23. The rise and fall of periphrastic DO in early Modern English, or “Howe the Scots will declare themselv ’s” 373
  24. Grammatical description and language use in the seventeenth century 395
  25. Geographical, socio-spatial and systemic distance in the spread of the relative who in Scots 417
  26. Inversion in embedded questions in some regional varieties of English 439
  27. Putting words in their place: An approach to Middle English word geography 455
  28. 4. Phonology
  29. HappY-tensing: A recent innovation? 483
  30. Syllable ONSET in the history of English 499
  31. Name index 541
  32. Subject index 551
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