Middeke | The Old English Case System | Buch | 978-90-04-43526-1 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, Band 12, 422 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 854 g

Reihe: Brill's Studies in Historical Linguistics

Middeke

The Old English Case System

Case and Argument Structure Constructions
Erscheinungsjahr 2021
ISBN: 978-90-04-43526-1
Verlag: Brill

Case and Argument Structure Constructions

Buch, Englisch, Band 12, 422 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 854 g

Reihe: Brill's Studies in Historical Linguistics

ISBN: 978-90-04-43526-1
Verlag: Brill


The Old English Case System. Case and Argument Structure Constructions by Kirsten Middeke is a Construction Grammar account of Old English argument structure that integrates modern cognitive corpus linguistics and traditional philological work. This is the first major study on Old English morphosyntax from a constructional perspective, based on findings from various strands of theoretical linguistics, including generative approaches, constructionist accounts, quantitative linguistics, and many more. It argues for a new take on historical comparative syntax, a field which has been dormant for quite a while but might see a new boost through the ideas presented here.

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Autoren/Hrsg.


Weitere Infos & Material


List of Figures and Tables

Abbreviations

Acknowledgements

1 Introduction: And gefn?s þone toþ …

1.1 Studying Old English Argument Structure from a Construction-Grammar Perspective

1.2 The Lexicon Is Not Boring! Cognitive Historical Linguistics

1.3 Objectives

1.4 Organization

1.5 Notes on the Text

2 Not Balanced: The Database

2.1 Corpora and Methods of Data Collection and Analysis

2.2 The Verb as a Diagnostic for Constructional Meaning

2.3 Doing Cognitive Linguistics with Historical Corpora

3 Theoretical Preliminaries

3.1 Constructions

3.2 Valency

3.3 Construal

3.4 Semantic Roles

3.5 Formalism

4 Origins, Wholes, Stimuli—and Aspect? The Genitive

4.1 Introduction: Genitivus is gestr?nendlic

4.2 The Old English Genitive as a Family-Resemblance Category

4.3 Functions of Arguments and Adjuncts in the Genitive

4.4 Synthesis: The Functions of the Old English Genitive

5 Place, Time and Manner: The Instrumental

5.1 Introduction: A Case or Not a Case Any More?

5.2 The Old English Instrumental: Forms and History

5.3 Distributional Analysis: Frequencies and Collexemes

5.4 Fixed Formulae or Productive Pattern?

5.5 Factors Influencing the Frequency of the Instrumental

5.6 The Semantic Networks of the Instrumental

5.7 Synthesis: The Functions of the Old English Instrumental

6 Recipients and Addressees, Beneficiaries and Experiencers: The Dative

6.1 Introduction: Dativus is forgyfendlic

6.2 Functions of Arguments and Adjuncts in the Dative

6.3 Functions of Datives with Nouns and Adjectives

6.4 Formally Assigned Datives

6.5 Synthesis: The Functions of the Old English Dative

7 Patients, Targets, Direct Objects? The Accusative

7.1 Introduction

7.2 Functions of Arguments and Adjuncts in the Accusative

7.3 Discussion: The Accusative in Semantic Space

7.4 Evaluation: Semantic and Syntactic Case?

7.5 Synthesis: The Functions of the Old English Accusative

8 Affectees: Oblique Case and Impersonal Constructions

8.1 Introduction: Impersonal Constructions Are Not Quirky!

8.2 Old English Impersonal Clause Patterns and their Associated Event Types

8.3 Discussion: How many Impersonal Constructions are there, and where do they Come from?

8.4 Synthesis: The Functions of the Old English Oblique Affectee Constructions

9 Agent, Topic, Subject? The Nominative

9.1 Introduction: The Case of the Subject?

9.2 Functions of Arguments in the Nominative

9.3 Functions of hit and þæt

9.4 Synthesis: The Functions of the Old English Nominative

10 Synthesis and Theoretical Implications

10.1 Introduction

10.2 Construction Grammar: Case Constructions and Argument Structure Constructions

10.3 Valency: Verbs and Argument Structures, Integration and Coercion

10.4 The Construct-i-con: Contextual Neutralization, Constructional Synonymy and Co-extensive Categories

10.5 Conclusion: A Construction Grammar Approach to Old English Argument Structure

Appendix to Chapter 4

Appendix to Chapter 5

Appendix to Chapter 6

Appendix to Chapter 8

References

Index


Kirsten Middeke, Ph.D. (2018), Freie Universität Berlin, is a postdoc at that university. She researches and teaches both synchronic and diachronic linguistics and is particularly interested in empirical methods for studying the semantics and evolution of grammatical constructions.



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