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Suffixes in Competition: On the Use of -our and -or in Early Modern English
In: International Journal of English Studies; Vol. 20 No. 2 (2020): Standardisation and Change in Early Modern English: Empirical Approaches ; 169-183 ; International Journal of English Studies; Vol. 20 Núm. 2 (2020): Standardisation and Change in Early Modern English: Empirical Approaches ; 1989-6131 ; 1578-7044 (2020)
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2
The Intensifiers this/that in Some Varieties of English
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3
‘We kissed one another and parted good friends.’ On the expression of reciprocity in Early Modern English
In: Onomázein: Revista de lingüística, filología y traducción de la Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, ISSN 0718-5758, Nº. 48, 2020, pags. 45-68 (2020)
Abstract: Reciprocity in contemporary English is normally expressed by means of the compound pronouns each other and one another, both constructions used interchangeably and without any apparent difference in meaning, even though various factors have been proposed to account for the choice between the two alternatives. Among them, style stands out as the most convincing argument postulating the use of each other and one another in informal and formal contexts, register variation, each other being by far the most common form in all contexts while one another becomes relatively common in fiction and academic prose (Biber et al., 1999: 346-347). From a historical viewpoint, each other stems from those Old English constructions in which the quantifier ælc occurs with the alterity word o¯þer in neighbouring positions, while one another is a Late Middle English development of (the) one + (the) (an)other, where the first element is also the grammatical subject and the second the object (Haas, 2010: 63-68). Since then, both reciprocals have competed for more than five centuries for the expression of reciprocity in English and, interestingly enough, the dilemma is still unresolved, contradicting the general assumption that the competition between forms whose meaning is compatible is usually resolved either by the loss of one of them or by the adoption of a different (Kahlas-Tarkka, 2004: 132). The Early Modern English period becomes a crucial period in the history of reciprocals witnessing the transition from the discontinuous forms each the other and one the other to the fossilized constructions each other and one another. In the light of this, the present paper pursues the following objectives: a) to trace the origin, grammaticalization and univerbation of each other and one another within their own paradigm in Early Modern English, and b) to analyse the use and distribution of these reciprocals to determine the date and the circumstances that contributed to the adoption of each other over one another for the expression of reciprocity in the history of English. The source of evidence comes from the Early English Books Online Corpus (for the period 1473-1700) and the Old Bailey Corpus (for the period 1674-1913).
Keyword: each other; Early Modern English; grammaticalization; one another; reciprocals
URL: https://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/oaiart?codigo=7510632
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4
Scribal punctuation of coordinate and subordinate clauses in Late Middle English and Early Modern English
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5
From demonstratives to degree words: on the origin of the intensifying function of this/that in american english
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6
Third person present tense markers in some varieties of English
In: English world-wide. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins 38 (2017) 1, 77-103
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7
Early Modern English Scientific Text Types: Edition and Assessment of Linguistic Complexity in the Texts of MS Hunter 135 (ff. 34r–121v)
Romero Barranco, Jesus. - : UMA Editorial, 2017
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8
That-clauses: Retention and Omission of Complementizer that in some Varieties of English
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9
The Standardization of Punctuation in Early Modern English Legal Proclamations
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10
On the Decline of Pleonastic that in Late Middle English and Early Modern English
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11
‘I got into the room by means of a picklock key and found him’ Complex Prepositions in Early Modern English
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12
Approaches to Middle English : variation, contact and change
Conde-Silvestre, Juan Camilo [Herausgeber]; Calle-Martín, Javier [Herausgeber]. - Frankfurt, M. : Lang-Ed., 2015
DNB Subject Category Language
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13
Approaches to Middle English : Variation, Contact and Change
Conde-Silvestre, Juan Camilo [Herausgeber]; Calle-Martín, Javier [Herausgeber]. - Frankfurt : Peter Lang GmbH, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften, 2015
DNB Subject Category Language
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14
The split infintive in Middle English
In: North-Western European language evolution. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins 68 (2015) 2, 227-250
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15
"'It is not exactly that bad': on the use of the intensifiers this and that in english
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16
On the use of "that"/"zero" as object clause links in early English medical writing
In: Studia neophilologica. - New York, NY [u.a.] : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 86 (2014) 1, 1-16
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17
On the history of the intensifier "wonder" in English
In: Australian journal of linguistics. - Basingstoke, Hampshire : Taylor & Francis 34 (2014) 3, 399-419
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18
‘Give hit him with great honour’: on the Double Object Construction in Late Middle English
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19
On the Use of make to vs. make ø in early English Medical Writing
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20
Finite Complementation in Early English Medical Writing: A case Study of Syntactic Constructions in Competition
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