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Phonaesthesia and other forms of word play

  • Julie Coleman
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Chapters in this book

  1. I-XL I
  2. I Language history. The history of English
  3. Phonetics/Phonology
  4. Phonaesthesia and other forms of word play 3
  5. Middle English phonology without the syllable 13
  6. Chaucerian phonemics: Evidence and interpretation 29
  7. The hiatus in English historical phonology 59
  8. Early Modern English vowel shortenings in monosyllables before dentals: A morphologically conditioned sound change? 65
  9. The metrical prominence hierarchy in Old English verse 73
  10. Morphology
  11. The issue of double modals in the history of English revisited 87
  12. The evolution of definite and indefinite articles in English 101
  13. The morphology and dialect of Old English disyllabic nouns 113
  14. The root of the matter: OE wyrt, wyrtwale, -a, wyrt(t)rum(a) and cognates 127
  15. Nominal markedness changes in three Old and Middle English psalters — using the past to predict the past 143
  16. The instrumental in Old English 153
  17. Cumulative phenomena between prefixes and verbs in Old English 167
  18. Morphological variation and change in Early Modern English: my/mine, thy/thine 179
  19. The genitive and the category of case in the history of English 193
  20. Weak-to-strong: A shift in English verbs? 215
  21. Chaucer’s compound nouns: Patterns and productivity 229
  22. Syntax
  23. Subjecthood and the English impersonal 251
  24. The grammaticalisation of infinitival to in English compared with German and Dutch 265
  25. -THING in English: A case of grammaticalization? 281
  26. Topics in Old and Middle English negative sentences 293
  27. Topicalization in Old English and its effects. Some remarks 307
  28. “Therfor speke playnly to the poynt”: Punctuation in Robert Keayne’s notes of church meetings from early Boston, New England 323
  29. ME can and gan in context 343
  30. Economy as a principle of syntactic change 357
  31. Optional THAT with subordinators in Middle English 373
  32. Relative clauses in Thomas Browne: On the way to standard syntax 385
  33. Subject-oriented adverbs in a diachronic and contrastive perspective 395
  34. The concept of the macrosyntagm in Early Modern English prison narratives 423
  35. Object-verb word order in 16th century English: A study of its frequency and status 439
  36. Lexis
  37. Three etymological cruxes: Early Middle English cang ‘fool(ish)’ and (Early) Middle English cangun/conjoun ‘fool’, Middle English crois versus cross and Early Modern English clown 457
  38. “With this ring I thee wed”: The verbs to wed and to marry in the history of English 467
  39. The ‘Hard Words’ of Levins’ dictionary 483
  40. From Jabberwocky back to Old English: Nonsense, Anglo-Saxon and Oxford 503
  41. “To make merry”, its variants in Middle English, and the Helsinki Corpus 521
  42. Translation as enrichment of language in sixteenth century England: The Courtyer (1561) by Sir Thomas Hoby 543
  43. Re-examining the influence of Scandinavian on English: The case of ditch/dike 561
  44. Forget-me-not - an English plant name of European lineage 571
  45. Some East Anglian dialect words in the light of historical toponymy 585
  46. Word-formation and the text in Early English: The axiological functions of Old English prefixes 593
  47. Varieties, past and present
  48. The battle at ‘Acleah’: A linguist’s reflection on annals 851 and 871 of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle 605
  49. What to call a name? Problems of “head-forms” for Old English personal names 615
  50. Laʒamon’s idiolect 629
  51. The influence of English upon Scottish writing 637
  52. The dialects of Middle English 655
  53. The Northern paradigm and its implications for scribal grammar in Þe Wohnunge of Ure Lauerd 665
  54. Punctuation in the Middle English prose legend of St Faith in MS Southwell Minster 7 679
  55. Derivation of it from Þat in eastern dialects of British English 691
  56. Social embedding of linguistic changes in Tudor English 701
  57. On the representation of English low vowels 719
  58. The possessive adjective as involvement marker in colonial Virginia cookeries 739
  59. British vernacular dialects in the formation of American English: The case of East Anglian do 749
  60. On negation in dialectal English 759
  61. General
  62. English historical linguistics and philology in Japan 1950-1994: A survey with a list of publications arranged in chronological order 771
  63. Knowledge of Old English in the Middle English period? 791
  64. By Saint Tanne: Pious oaths or swearing in Middle English? An assessment of genres 815
  65. Historical linguistics. Language groups and families
  66. On the linguistic prehistory of Finno-Ugric 829
  67. The development of the Germanic suffix -isk- 863
  68. A case of divergent phonological evolution in West Germanic 873
  69. Some West Indo-European words of uncertain origin 879
  70. The history of linguistics
  71. Baudouin de Courtenay on Lautgesetze 911
  72. ‘Speculative’ historical linguistics 923
  73. Language contact, language history and history of linguistics: John Palsgrave’s “Anglo-French” grammar (1530) 929
  74. Language contact and change. Contact
  75. Cross-dialectal parallels and language contacts: Evidence from Celtic Englishes 943
  76. A note on the use of data from non-standard varieties of English in linguistic argumentation 959
  77. Arguments for creolisation in Irish English 969
  78. Romance Germanic contact and the peripheral vowel feature 1039
  79. The cline of creoleness in negation patterns of Caribbean English creoles 1055
  80. Change
  81. How languages living apart together may innovate their systems (as illustrated by to in Russian) 1069
  82. Lexical diffusion and evolution theory 1083
  83. Types and tokens in language change: Some evidence from Romance 1099
  84. A sound change in progress? 1113
  85. Grammatical ambiguity and language change 1125
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