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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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From OV to VO in Early Middle English

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Carola Trips
University of Stuttgart

2002. xiv, 359 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 2781 2 / EUR 130.00
978 1 58811 311 5 / USD 195.00
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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9627 6 / EUR 130.00 / USD 195.00
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This monograph answers the question of why English changed from an OV to a VO language on the assumption that this change is due to intensive language contact with Scandinavian. It shows for the first time that the English language was much more heavily influenced by Scandinavian than assumed before, i.e., northern Early Middle English texts clearly show Scandinavian syntactic patterns like stylistic fronting that can only be found today in the Modern Scandinavian languages. Thus, it sheds new light on the force of language contact in that it shows that a language can be heavily influenced through contact with another language in such a way that it affects deeper levels of language. It further gives an introduction to working with the Penn-Helsinki-Parsed Corpus of Middle English II (PPCMEII). It discusses the texts included in the corpus, it describes the format of the texts, and it explains how to search the corpus with the tool called Corpus Search. The book targets researchers in diachronic syntax, comparative syntax and in general linguists working in the field of generative syntax. It can further be used as an introduction to working with the PPCMEII.


Table of contents

Language abbreviations
xi
Acknowledgments
xiii
1. Introduction
1–6
2. The dialects of Middle English
7–36
3. Syntactic change
37–74
4. Word order change in Early Middle English
75–119
5. Object movement
121–222
6. V2 and cliticisation of subject pronouns
223–273
7. Stylistic fronting
275–330
8. Summary and conclusions
331–333
Appendices
335–337
References
339–350
Index
351–356