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Linguistic change in words one owns: How trademarks become “generic”

  • Ronald R. Butters and Jennifer Westerhaus
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Chapters in this book

  1. i-iv i
  2. Table of contents v
  3. Foreword ix
  4. Section 1: Linguistics and philology
  5. Introduction: Linguistics and philology 3
  6. Philology, linguistics, and the history of [hw]~[w] 7
  7. An essay in historical sociolinguistics?: On Donka Minkova’s “Philology, linguistics, and the history of [hw]~[w]” 47
  8. A brief response 55
  9. Why we should not believe in short diphthongs 57
  10. Extended forms (Streckformen) in English 85
  11. Linguistic change in words one owns: How trademarks become “generic” 111
  12. Section 2: Corpus- and text-based studies
  13. Introduction: Corpus- and text-based studies 127
  14. The meanings and uses of the progressive construction in an early eighteenth-century English network 131
  15. Investigating the expressive progressive: On Susan M. Fitzmaurice’s “The meanings and uses of the progressive construction in an early eighteenth-century English network” 175
  16. A brief response 183
  17. Modal use across registers and time 189
  18. The need for good texts: The case of Henry Machyn’s Day Book, 1550-1563 217
  19. The perils of firsts: Dating Rawlinson MS Poet. 108 and tracing the development of monolingual English lexicons 229
  20. Section 3: Constraint-based studies
  21. Introduction: Constraint-based studies 275
  22. The evolution of Middle English alliterative meter 279
  23. Old English poetry and the alliterative revival: On Geoffrey Russom’s “The evolution of Middle English alliterative meter” 305
  24. A brief response 313
  25. A central metrical prototype for English iambic tetrameter verse: Evidence from Chaucer’s octosyllabic lines 315
  26. Early English clause structure change in a stochastic optimality theory setting 343
  27. The role of perceptual contrast in Verner’s Law 371
  28. Section 4: Dialectology
  29. Introduction: Dialectology 411
  30. Historical perspectives on the pen/pin merger in Southern American English 415
  31. Digging up the roots of Southern American English: On Michael Montgomery and Connie Eble’s “Historical perspectives on the pen/pin merger in Southern American English” 435
  32. A brief response 445
  33. Vowel merger in west central Indiana: A naughty, knotty project 447
  34. The spread of negative contraction in early English 459
  35. Name index 483
  36. Subject index 491
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