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Changes in Word Order: Scribal Corrections to the Placement of Clitic Pronouns

  • Joanne Vera Stolk
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From Greece to Cappadocia
This chapter is in the book From Greece to Cappadocia

Abstract

Scribal corrections can offer us useful insights into the linguistic choices during language production. The examples discussed in this article attest of scribal revision affecting the use or positioning of clitic pronouns in Greek documentary papyri from Egypt. Possessive clitic pronouns interchange between prenominal and postnominal position and object clitic pronouns between preverbal and postverbal position. In those positions, several options seem to have been competing in the postclassical Greek language and in the minds of the writers of the examples cited below.

Abstract

Scribal corrections can offer us useful insights into the linguistic choices during language production. The examples discussed in this article attest of scribal revision affecting the use or positioning of clitic pronouns in Greek documentary papyri from Egypt. Possessive clitic pronouns interchange between prenominal and postnominal position and object clitic pronouns between preverbal and postverbal position. In those positions, several options seem to have been competing in the postclassical Greek language and in the minds of the writers of the examples cited below.

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter I
  2. Contents V
  3. List of Figures and Charts IX
  4. List of Tables XI
  5. Abbreviations
  6. In Honour of Mark Janse 1
  7. Part I: Greek Through the Ages — From Homer to Byzantium
  8. Hyperbaton and Homeric Colometry: A First Exploration 15
  9. Aspect in the Gortyn Law Code: The Subjectivity of the Category 41
  10. Tense, Aspect, Iterativity and Related Textual Criticism: A Case Study Based on Herodotos, Historiai 4.78 65
  11. The Tragic Aorist: A Well-defined and Homogeneous Group? 101
  12. Changes in Word Order: Scribal Corrections to the Placement of Clitic Pronouns 127
  13. Κένταυρος, Κέρβερος and Their Possible Etymological Relatives 139
  14. Light from Gothic on the Post-Classical Greek Lexicon 161
  15. The Theory of Semantic Fields and the Greek Lexicon: The Case of ΠΟΝΗΡΟΣ and its Semantic Congeners in the History of the Greek Language 167
  16. Figs and the City: A Comic Cocktail (Aristophanes, fr. [dub.] 955 Kassel-Austin, PCG) 197
  17. Musings on an Attic Muse: Three Ancient Responses to a Passage from Xenophon’s Anabasis 215
  18. ἐρρωμένος μοι διατελοῖς μετὰ τῶν φιλτάτων κύριέ μου ἀσύγκριτε: The Social Semiotics of Formulaic Extravagance in the Ancient Greek Epistolary Frame 237
  19. Homer in Byzantium: Comment parler des livres que l’on n’a pas lus? 271
  20. Koineization in Ancient Epirus: Some Additional Insights from Onomastics 301
  21. The Papyrus of the Curse of Artemisia: Dialect and Interference 333
  22. Part II: Greek in Contact — Dialect and Diversity in the Modern Era
  23. On the So-Called Progressive in Romeyka 353
  24. The Exploitation of Turkish Dialectal Lexicography: Dialectal Turkish Loanwords in the Historical Dictionary of Cappadocian Dialects 381
  25. Investigating Derivational Borrowability in the Cappadocian Greek Dialectal Landscape: The Emergence of allo-morphomes 401
  26. Aivaliot Morphology: Selected Phenomena from Prefixization and Verb Borrowing 429
  27. Innovation and Retention in Silliot Greek 459
  28. The Historical Dictionary of Cappadocian Dialects as a Contribution to the Study of Variation and Change 477
  29. List of Contributors 503
  30. Index Rerum
  31. Index Nominum
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