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Corpus approaches to grammaticalization in English
by
Lindquist, Hans
, Mair, Christian
in
Discourse analysis
/ English language
/ English language -- Discourse analysis
/ English language -- Grammaticalization
/ Grammaticalization
2004
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Corpus approaches to grammaticalization in English
by
Lindquist, Hans
, Mair, Christian
in
Discourse analysis
/ English language
/ English language -- Discourse analysis
/ English language -- Grammaticalization
/ Grammaticalization
2004
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eBook
Corpus approaches to grammaticalization in English
2004
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Overview
As a counterexample to unidirectionality in grammaticalization, Newmeyer (1998:270) cites the loss of second-person singular subject clitics, e.g., in hastou and wiltou, in 16th century English (Kroch et al. 1982). These forms are a common, albeit optional, feature of Middle English. Though full thou forms replace -tou/-tow clitics in Early Modern English, second-person plural enclitics, subject proclitics, and object enclitics attest to the continued viability of clisis. This paper argues that -tou/-tow is a reduced form, not a clitic, its disappearance being attributable to loss of a phonological rule, not decliticization. This change predates the replacement of thou by you, the non-expression of subjects in imperatives, and the spread of do in questions and is sudden rather than gradual.
Publisher
J. Benjamins,John Benjamins Publishing Company,John Benjamins
Subject
ISBN
1588115232, 9789027222848, 9027222843, 9781588115232
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