The semantics of syntactic change : aspects of the evolution of do in English / by Dieter Stein.
Material type: TextSeries: Trends in linguistics. Studies and monographs ; ; 47.Publication details: Berlin ; New York : Mouton de Gruyter, 1990.Description: 1 online resource (444 pages) : illustrationsContent type:- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9783110846829
- 3110846829
- Do (The English word)
- English language -- Syntax
- English language -- Semantics
- Do (Le mot anglais)
- Anglais (Langue) -- Syntaxe
- Anglais (Langue) -- Sémantique
- LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES -- Linguistics -- Etymology
- LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES -- Linguistics -- General
- Do (Vocablo)
- Lengua inglesa -- Sintaxis
- Lengua inglesa -- Semántica
- Do (The English word)
- English language -- Semantics
- English language -- Syntax
- Taalverandering
- Semantiek
- Werkwoorden
- To do (werkwoord)
- Engels
- Hilfsverb
- Sprachwandel
- do
- Englisch
- 422 20
- PE1317.D6 S75 1990
- 18.04
- HF 296
- digitized 2011 HathiTrust Digital Library committed to preserve
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Materials specified | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Electronic-Books | OPJGU Sonepat- Campus | E-Books EBSCO | Available |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 415-442) and index.
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Print version record.
Preface -- List of abbreviations -- Chapter One: Introduction -- 1. Theoretical motivation -- 2. Why re-study the development of do? -- 3. Theories and data -- 4. Heterogeneity of explanatory dimensions -- 5. Structure of presentation -- Chapter Two: Do up to the fifteenth century -- 1. Phases of do development -- 2. The origin of “meaningless periphrastic do� -- 3. Do in the Paston letters (1422�1509) -- 4. The democratization of do: a speculation -- Chapter Three: Do and discourse structure -- 1. Do as a marker of discourse-semantic prominence
2. Saliency and foregrounding3. Foreground and contrastiveness -- 4. Local foreground structure markers -- Chapter Four: Syntax and style in the sixteenth century -- 1. Do in the sixteenth century: the quantitative problem -- 2. Standard and prose style -- 3. Main stylistic currents -- 4. Relevant stylistic structures -- 5. Imitating Latin syntax -- 6. Antithesis -- Chapter Five: The semantics of do in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries -- 1. Analysis of a pamphlet (1521) -- 2. Authority -- 3. Rhetoric and foreground -- 4. Rhetorical questions
5. Negation6. Intensity -- 7. Performatives, speech act verbs, and verbs of perception -- 8. Logical relationships -- 9. Standardization and synonyms -- Chapter Six: Unity and diversity: style, dialect and the semantics of do before 1600 -- 1. Use and semantics -- 2. Syntactic versus semantic explanation -- 3. Do as a marker of courtly speech -- 4. Do in low texts -- 5. The demise of courtly do -- 6. A case study: Early American letters -- 7. Semantic, stylistic and dialectal diversity, and German tun -- 8. Methodological considerations
Chapter Seven: Do in the Shakespeare corpus1. An initial hypothesis -- 1.1. The problem -- 1.2. The phonotactics and frequency of thou + st -- 1.3. Methodological advantages of the Shakespeare corpus -- 2. Subcategorizations and terminological conventions -- 3. Phonotactics and periphrasis frequency -- 3.1. Differences between person and tense categories -- 3.2. Differences between phonetically defined types of verb stems in the present -- 3.3. Differences between syntactic contexts in the present -- 3.4. Generalization in the present from thou + you
4. Diachronic interpretation of the synchronic pattern4.1. Analysis of the preterite and diachronic interpretation of the subcategorical pattern -- 4.2. Stability of the variational pattern -- 5. Further strategies of avoiding (d)st -- 6. Negatives -- Chapter Eight: Do in questions in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries: the statistical evidence -- 1. Methodological considerations -- 2. Corpora analyzed -- 3. From raw data to indices: an example -- 4. Periphrasis frequency in questions in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries: the evidence
English.
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