Linguistics across Historical and Geographical Boundaries :Vol 1: Linguistic Theory and Historical Linguistics. Vol 2: Descriptive, Contrastive, and Applied Linguistics. In Honour of Jacek Fisiak on the Occasion of His Fiftieth Birthday ( Trends in Linguistics. Studies and Monographs TiLSM )

Publication subTitle :Vol 1: Linguistic Theory and Historical Linguistics. Vol 2: Descriptive, Contrastive, and Applied Linguistics. In Honour of Jacek Fisiak on the Occasion of His Fiftieth Birthday

Publication series :Trends in Linguistics. Studies and Monographs TiLSM

Author: Dieter Kastovsky   Aleksander Szwedek  

Publisher: De Gruyter Mouton‎

Publication year: 1986

E-ISBN: 9783110856132

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9783110104264

Subject: H0 Linguistics

Language: ENG

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Chapter

Editors’ note

pp.:  1 – 7

Curriculum Vitae

pp.:  7 – 9

List of publications

pp.:  9 – 11

Part I. Theoretical linguistics

pp.:  11 – 35

A plea for phraseo-stylistics

pp.:  61 – 75

Kruszewski’s contribution to general linguistic theory

pp.:  75 – 87

Language universals, linguistic theory, and philosophy

pp.:  87 – 111

Semantic features and prototype theory in English lexicology

pp.:  111 – 119

Some remarks on transformations

pp.:  119 – 129

Rhythm in stress-timed and syllable-timed languages: some general considerations

pp.:  129 – 139

On the problem of meaning in sociolinguistic studies of syntactic variation

pp.:  139 – 145

Grammar as speaker’s knowledge versus grammar as linguists’ characterization of norms

pp.:  145 – 159

Concepts, fields, and ‘non-basic’ lexical items

pp.:  159 – 169

Syntactic ambiguity: a systematic accident

pp.:  169 – 179

Generated or degenerate? Two forms of linguistic competence

pp.:  179 – 191

Part II. Historical linguistics

pp.:  191 – 209

An etymology for the aquatic ‘acker/aiker’ in English, and other grains of truth?

pp.:  209 – 211

Contrasting fact with fiction: the common denominator in internal reconstruction, with a bibliography

pp.:  211 – 217

On Old English gefrœgnod in Beowulf 1333 a

pp.:  217 – 227

Medieval English scribal practice: some questions and some assumptions

pp.:  227 – 233

Remarques sur les dérivés chez Richard Rolle: Où en est la morphologie?

pp.:  233 – 245

Cautions about loan words and sound correspondences

pp.:  245 – 255

A cœ̄ġ to Old English syllable structure

pp.:  255 – 259

F for Fisiak: a feuilleton

pp.:  259 – 265

Interlanguage simplification in Middle English vowel phonology?

pp.:  265 – 273

Romance loans in Middle English: a re-assessment

pp.:  273 – 287

The phonology of Modern French loanwords in present-day English

pp.:  287 – 301

Modern English cruive ‘wicker salmon-trap’

pp.:  301 – 311

Consecutives and serials in Indo-European

pp.:  311 – 327

More about the textual functions of the Old English adverbial þa

pp.:  327 – 335

The relative clauses in Beowulf

pp.:  335 – 345

On language contact and syntactic change

pp.:  345 – 351

Middle English – a Creole?

pp.:  351 – 363

German Baum, English beam

pp.:  363 – 379

English ought (to)

pp.:  379 – 381

On syncope in Old English

pp.:  381 – 393

Some properties of analogical innovation

pp.:  393 – 401

On the syntax and semantics of free relative clauses in English and Romanian

pp.:  393 – 403

An inquiry into the nature of mixed grammars: two cases of grammatical variation in dialectal British English

pp.:  401 – 405

Modal verbs in English and Danish

pp.:  403 – 421

The drift toward agentivity and the development of the perfective use of have + pp. in English

pp.:  405 – 415

Case and rhyme in LaƷamon’s Brut

pp.:  415 – 421

Intensive language teaching: practice, problems, and prospects

pp.:  421 – 433

The influence of a century’s language planning on upper-class speech in Oslo

pp.:  421 – 431

The grammar of German haben

pp.:  423 – 425

The English prosody /h/

pp.:  425 – 443

Diachronic word-formation in a functional perspective

pp.:  431 – 443

Textlinguistic analysis of German and English curricula vitae

pp.:  433 – 441

New aspects for foreign language learning and teaching from conversational analysis

pp.:  441 – 457

The progress of the expression of temporal relationships from Old English to Early Middle English

pp.:  443 – 457

On stress in Polish

pp.:  443 – 455

Some remarks on cleft sentences in present-day English

pp.:  455 – 459

The origin of the Old English dialects

pp.:  457 – 471

Tertium Comparationis in contrastive sociolinguistics

pp.:  457 – 471

Euro-English

pp.:  459 – 471

More on pragmatic equivalence

pp.:  471 – 485

Metaphor in the English lexicon: the verb

pp.:  471 – 481

A Middle English dialect boundary

pp.:  471 – 477

The development of the category of gender in the Slavic languages

pp.:  477 – 493

A note on reverse wh-clefts in English

pp.:  481 – 495

Barriers to intercultural communication between Americans and Japanese

pp.:  485 – 495

Words without etyma: Germanic ‘tooth’

pp.:  493 – 507

Language teaching in a prototypical situation

pp.:  495 – 511

A case-study in the dynamics of written communication

pp.:  495 – 503

Towards a definition of semantic constraints on negative prefixation in English and German

pp.:  503 – 521

Reflexes of PIE d < t’

pp.:  507 – 517

How do indexicals fit into situations? On deixis in English and Polish

pp.:  511 – 527

Germanic and other Indo-European languages

pp.:  517 – 525

Autosegments, linked matrices, and the Irish lenition

pp.:  521 – 535

Cantar de Mio Cid Y. 2375

pp.:  525 – 535

An Elizabethan contrastive grammar of Spanish and French

pp.:  527 – 541

The minimal distance principle revisited

pp.:  535 – 553

Some verbal remarks

pp.:  535 – 547

The interdisciplinary framework of the theory-dynamic phase in finalized linguistics

pp.:  541 – 549

A note on Dr. Johnson’s History of the English language

pp.:  547 – 559

Concerning the correction and non-correction of language-learners’ errors

pp.:  549 – 559

Remarks on Lakoff’s classification of verbs

pp.:  553 – 579

Complementation in Ælfric’s Colloquy

pp.:  559 – 567

English traditional grammars in the nineteenth century

pp.:  559 – 571

Metathesis

pp.:  567 – 581

Language learners’ errors in a pedagogical perspective

pp.:  571 – 595

Metathese im arabischen Dialekt von Tunis

pp.:  579 – 591

An analysis of the Old Saxon velar consonants in initial position

pp.:  581 – 591

Undergytan as a ‘Winchester’ word

pp.:  591 – 603

Question-orientation versus answer-orientation in English interrogative clauses

pp.:  591 – 607

Migranten und autochthone Sprachgruppen

pp.:  595 – 615

The Germanic possessive type dem Vater sein Haus

pp.:  603 – 613

The tag syntagm of spoken English

pp.:  607 – 627

Middle English translations of Old English charters in the Liber Monasterii de Hyda: a case of historical error analysis

pp.:  613 – 625

Expository paragraph structure in Slavic and Romance languages

pp.:  615 – 625

The effects of language standardization on deletion rules: some comparative Germanic evidence from t/d-deletion

pp.:  625 – 639

Glimpses into trends of contrastive linguistics and error analysis at AILA’s world congresses from Cambridge (1968) to Brussels (1984)

pp.:  625 – 635

The function of prefixation in the assignment of aspect to the Polish verb

pp.:  627 – 637

Some recent approaches to equivalence in Contrastive Studies

pp.:  635 – 643

A prototype approach to denominal adjectives

pp.:  637 – 647

Degemination in Old English and the formal apparatus of generative phonology

pp.:  639 – 655

On different types of translation

pp.:  643 – 659

The case of American Polish

pp.:  647 – 659

Old English Northumbrian verb inflection revisited

pp.:  655 – 671

The semantics of antonymic pairs of adjectives: elicitation test evidence from English and Polish

pp.:  659 – 665

On some recent claims concerning derivational morphology

pp.:  659 – 669

The mother tongue and the foreign language in interaction

pp.:  665 – 681

Sentence stress and category membership

pp.:  669 – 695

Syllable theory and Old English verse: a preliminary observation

pp.:  671 – 685

Creating new grammars: on theoretical approaches to second language acquisition

pp.:  681 – 695

Hebrew loan words in English

pp.:  685 – 693

On delimiting the senses of near-synonyms in historical semantics. A case-study of adjectives of ‘moral sufficiency’ in the Old English Andreas

pp.:  693 – 705

Because

pp.:  695 – 707

Definitions and first person pronoun involvement in Thomas Elyot’s Dictionary

pp.:  695 – 703

Paraphrase strategies and the teaching of translation

pp.:  703 – 713

An emotionally conditioned split of some personal names

pp.:  705 – 727

The possibilities of may and can

pp.:  707 – 711

Zur formalen Variabilität der deutschen Morpheme

pp.:  711 – 721

A processing explanation for a syntactic difference between English and Polish

pp.:  713 – 723

Part IV. Contrastive and applied linguistics

pp.:  721 – 743

Indexes

pp.:  723 – 739

Ruckümläut

pp.:  727 – 735

Dialectal speech areas in England: Orton’s lexical evidence

pp.:  735 – 759

LastPages

pp.:  739 – 1597

Prepositions in Welsh and Finnish case-endings: a contrastive study

pp.:  743 – 745

Elements of structuralism in nineteenth century foreign language teaching

pp.:  745 – 753

Context in contrastive linguistics: one and ein

pp.:  753 – 761

The ‘Exmoor Courtship’ and ‘Exmoor Scolding’: an evaluation of two eighteenth-century dialect texts

pp.:  759 – 775

Contrastive linguistics and language typology: the three-way approach

pp.:  761 – 777

The Old English digraph 〈cg〉 again

pp.:  775 – 787

Notes on the terminology of applied linguistics

pp.:  777 – 791

Bantawa rV-

pp.:  787 – 797

Contrastive linguistics and language typology

pp.:  791 – 393

Proto-Indo-European verbal roots in Sanskrit and Polish

pp.:  797 – 807

Part III. Descriptive linguistics

pp.:  807 – 423

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