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List of figures | p. x |
List of tables xiv | |
Preface | p. xix |
Abbreviations and symbolic conventions | p. xxv |
Introduction: 'grammar blindness' in the recent history of English? | p. 1 |
Grammar is more than an arbitrary list of shibboleths | p. 1 |
Grammatical changes: proceeding slowly and invisible at close range? | p. 7 |
A frame of orientation: previous research on recent and ongoing grammatical changes in English | p. 16 |
Conclusion | p. 22 |
Comparative corpus linguistics: the methodological basis of this book | p. 24 |
(Computer) corpus linguistics: the Brown Corpus and after | p. 24 |
Comparable corpora and comparative corpus linguistics | p. 27 |
The methodological basis of comparable corpus linguistics | p. 31 |
Stages of investigation | p. 33 |
Rationalize the mark-up of the corpora | p. 33 |
Undertake annotation of the corpora | p. 33 |
Use search and retrieval software to identify and extract recurrent formal features in the corpus | p. 34 |
Refine the comparative analysis | p. 34 |
Derive difference-of-frequency tables | p. 35 |
Derive difference-of-frequency tables from inter-corpus comparisons | p. 36 |
Undertake further categorization of instances of features found in the corpora | p. 36 |
Further qualitative analysis, examining individual instances, or clusters of instances, in both corpora | p. 37 |
Functional interpretation of findings | p. 37 |
Further details and explanations of the stages of investigation | p. 37 |
(B) Annotation | p. 37 |
(C) Search expressions in CQP | p. 38 |
(D1) Frequency across genres and subcorpora | p. 40 |
(D2) External comparisons | p. 43 |
(D3) Further categorization of instances found in the corpora | p. 45 |
(E) Further qualitative analysis | p. 47 |
(F) Functional interpretation of findings on all levels | p. 49 |
Conclusion | p. 50 |
The subjunctive mood | p. 51 |
Introduction | p. 51 |
The revival of the mandative subjunctive | p. 52 |
Overall developments of the mandative subjunctive | p. 53 |
Is the mandative subjunctive losing its formal connotations? | p. 57 |
The were-subjunctive | p. 61 |
The were-subjunctive: diachronic development | p. 64 |
The were-subjunctive: a recessive formal option? | p. 66 |
Revival and demise of the subjunctive? An attempt at reconciling apparently contradictory developments | p. 67 |
Summary and conclusion | p. 69 |
The modal auxiliaries | p. 71 |
The declining use of the modal auxiliaries in written standard English 1961-1991/2 | p. 71 |
The changing use of the modals in different genres and subcorpora | p. 73 |
The changing use of the modals in spoken vs written corpora | p. 76 |
The core modals and competing expressions of modality | p. 78 |
Shrinking usage of particular modals: a more detailed examination | p. 79 |
The modals at the bottom of the frequency list: shall, ought to and need(n't) | p. 80 |
The semantics of modal decline: may, must and should | p. 83 |
Conclusion | p. 89 |
The so-called semi-modals | p. 91 |
Auxiliary-lexical verb gradience | p. 92 |
Overall changes in frequency of semi-modals | p. 98 |
Further evidence for grammaticalization? Phonetics and semantics | p. 105 |
Phonetic reduction and coalescence: gonna, gotta and wanna | p. 105 |
Signs of abstraction and generalization (semantic weakening) | p. 107 |
The ecology of obligation/necessity | p. 114 |
Conclusion | p. 116 |
The progressive | p. 118 |
Introduction | p. 118 |
Basic and special uses of the progressive | p. 119 |
Historical background | p. 120 |
Overview of recent distribution patterns | p. 122 |
Distribution in written BrE and AmE | p. 122 |
Distribution in contemporaneous BrE speech and other registers | p. 124 |
Present progressive active | p. 127 |
Quotations and contracted forms | p. 128 |
Stative verbs | p. 129 |
Subject type and reference | p. 130 |
Special uses | p. 131 |
The progressive passive | p. 136 |
The progressive in combination with modal auxiliaries | p. 139 |
Modal auxiliary + be -ing | p. 139 |
Will + be -ing | p. 139 |
Summary and conclusion | p. 141 |
The passive voice | p. 144 |
Introduction | p. 144 |
The be-passive | p. 148 |
The get-passive | p. 154 |
The mediopassive | p. 158 |
Summary and conclusion | p. 164 |
Take or have a look at a corpus? Expanded predicates in British and American English | p. 166 |
The state of the art | p. 167 |
Hypotheses | p. 170 |
Defining the variable | p. 173 |
Results | p. 174 |
Stylistic variation | p. 174 |
Diachronic variation | p. 175 |
Regional variation | p. 175 |
Summary | p. 179 |
Non-finite clauses | p. 181 |
Introduction: long-term trends in the evolution of English non-finite clauses | p. 181 |
Changes in non-finite clauses I: case studies of individual matrix verbs | p. 186 |
Help + infinitive | p. 187 |
Prevent/stop + NP + (from) + gerund | p. 193 |
Start and stop in catenative uses | p. 195 |
Want to | p. 199 |
Assessing the speed of changes | p. 201 |
Changes in non-finite clauses II: statistical trends in the tagged corpora | p. 201 |
Conclusion | p. 204 |
The noun phrase | p. 206 |
Parts of speech: an overall survey | p. 207 |
Nouns and noun sequences | p. 211 |
Common nouns | p. 212 |
Proper nouns, including proper nouns as acronyms | p. 212 |
Noun sequences and other juxtapositions | p. 214 |
Noun + common noun sequences | p. 216 |
Noun sequences with plural attributive nouns | p. 219 |
Sequences of proper nouns | p. 221 |
The s-genitive and the of-genitive | p. 222 |
The s-genitive | p. 223 |
The of-gentive | p. 224 |
Relative clauses | p. 226 |
Wh- relative clauses | p. 228 |
That relative clauses | p. 229 |
Zero relative clauses | p. 231 |
Pied-piping vs preposition stranding | p. 231 |
Summary and conclusion | p. 233 |
Linguistic and other determinants of change | p. 236 |
The functional and social processes of change | p. 236 |
Grammaticalization | p. 237 |
Colloquialization | p. 239 |
Contracted negatives and verb forms | p. 240 |
Not-negation vs no-negation | p. 241 |
Questions | p. 242 |
Other plausible grammatical signs of colloquialization | p. 243 |
Punctuation | p. 244 |
Problems and issues concerning colloquialization | p. 245 |
Densification of content | p. 249 |
Americanization? | p. 252 |
'Americanization' in relation to other trends | p. 256 |
'Americanization' and sociolinguistic globalization | p. 258 |
Other trends | p. 259 |
Democratization: ironing out differences | p. 259 |
Language prescriptions | p. 263 |
Analyticization? | p. 264 |
Conclusion | p. 267 |
The composition of the Brown Corpus | p. 273 |
The C8 tagset used for part-of-speech tagging of the four corpora | p. 276 |
Additional statistical tables and charts 281 | |
References | p. 314 |
Index | p. 335 |
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