Generative Theory and Corpus Studies :A Dialogue from 10 ICEHL ( Topics in English Linguistics TiEL )

Publication subTitle :A Dialogue from 10 ICEHL

Publication series :Topics in English Linguistics TiEL

Author: Ricardo Bermúdez-Otero   David Denison   Richard M. Hogg   C. B. McCully  

Publisher: De Gruyter Mouton‎

Publication year: 2000

E-ISBN: 9783110814699

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9783110166873

Subject: H314 syntax

Language: ENG

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Chapter

1. Structure

pp.:  1 – 21

On the history of relative that

pp.:  23 – 47

On the use of current intuition as a bias in historical linguistics: The case of the LOOK + -ly construction in English

pp.:  73 – 97

The indefinite pronoun man: “nominal“ or “pronominal”?

pp.:  97 – 123

1.2. Form and function

pp.:  123 – 143

Coordinate deletion, directionality and underlying structure in Old English

pp.:  143 – 145

The position of the adjective in Old English

pp.:  145 – 173

On the history of the s-genitive

pp.:  173 – 203

The passive as an object foregrounding device in early Modern English

pp.:  203 – 231

Reinforcing adjectives: A cognitive semantic perspective on grammaticalisation

pp.:  231 – 253

2. Text types

pp.:  253 – 279

Variation and change: Text types and the modelling of syntactic change

pp.:  279 – 281

The progressive form and genre variation during the nineteenth century

pp.:  281 – 303

The conjunction and in early Modern English: Frequencies and uses in speech-related writing and other texts

pp.:  303 – 319

3. Sociolinguistics and dialectology

pp.:  319 – 347

Processes of supralocalisation and the rise of Standard English in the early Modern period

pp.:  347 – 349

The rise and fall of periphrastic DO in early Modern English, or “Howe the Scots will declare themselv ’s”

pp.:  349 – 393

Grammatical description and language use in the seventeenth century

pp.:  393 – 415

Geographical, socio-spatial and systemic distance in the spread of the relative who in Scots

pp.:  415 – 437

Inversion in embedded questions in some regional varieties of English

pp.:  437 – 459

Putting words in their place: An approach to Middle English word geography

pp.:  459 – 475

4. Phonology

pp.:  475 – 501

HappY-tensing: A recent innovation?

pp.:  501 – 503

Syllable ONSET in the history of English

pp.:  503 – 519

Name index

pp.:  519 – 561

Subject index

pp.:  561 – 571

LastPages

pp.:  571 – 581

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