Startseite Linguistik & Semiotik Hir not lettyrd: The use of interjections, pragmatic markers and whan-clauses in The Book of Margery Kempe
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Hir not lettyrd: The use of interjections, pragmatic markers and whan-clauses in The Book of Margery Kempe

  • Liliana Sikorska
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Placing Middle English in Context
Ein Kapitel aus dem Buch Placing Middle English in Context

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. I-IV I
  2. Preface V
  3. Contents VII
  4. Introduction 1
  5. Chronological and social context
  6. Language periodization and the concept “middle” 7
  7. Language and society in twelfth-century England 43
  8. Syntactic constraints on code-switching in medieval texts 67
  9. Dialect, normalization and corpus-linguistic methodology
  10. Introduction 89
  11. Never the twain shall meet. Early Middle English - the East-West divide 97
  12. Standard language in Early Middle English? 125
  13. Changing spaces: Linguistic relationships and the dialect continuum 141
  14. Normalizing the word forms in The Ayenbite of Inwyt 181
  15. Chaucer's spelling and the manuscripts of the Canterbury Tales 199
  16. WHICH and THE WHICH in Late Middle English: Free variants? 209
  17. Lexical semantics
  18. Introduction 229
  19. Robbares and reuares þat ryche men despoilen: Some competing forms 235
  20. Here comes the judge: A small contribution to the study of French input into the vocabulary of the law in Middle English 255
  21. Naming and avoiding naming objects of terror: A case study 277
  22. An application of the Natural Semantic Metalanguage to diachronic semantics 293
  23. Patterns of semantic change in abstract nouns: The case of wit 313
  24. The spatial and temporal meanings of before in Middle English 329
  25. The adjective weary in Middle English structures: A syntactic-semantic study 339
  26. Utterance and discourse meaning
  27. Introduction 361
  28. Slanders, slurs and insults on the road to Canterbury: Forms of verbal aggression in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales 369
  29. Hir not lettyrd: The use of interjections, pragmatic markers and whan-clauses in The Book of Margery Kempe 391
  30. Whoso thorgh presumpcion ... mysdeme hyt: Chaucer's poetic adaptation of the medieval “book curse” 411
  31. Sounds, prosody and metre
  32. Introduction 427
  33. Middle English prosodic innovations and their testability in verse 431
  34. Old English (non)-palatalised */k/: Competing forces of change at work in the “seek”-verbs 461
  35. Some remarks on the nonprimary contexts for Homorganic Lengthening 475
  36. On the phonetic and phonological interpretation of the reflexes of the Old English diphthongs in the Ayenbite of Inwyt 489
  37. Author index 505
  38. Subject index 509
Heruntergeladen am 21.11.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110869514.391/html?lang=de
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