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9780521867221

Change in Contemporary English: A Grammatical Study

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  • ISBN13:

    9780521867221

  • ISBN10:

    0521867223

  • Edition: 1st
  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2009-11-16
  • Publisher: Cambridge University Press

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Summary

The aim of this series is to provide a framework for original studies of English, both present-day and past. All books are based securely on empirical research, and represent theoretical and descriptive contributions to our knowledge of national and international varieties of English, both written and spoken. The series covers a broad range of topics and approaches, including syntax phonology, grammar, vocabulary, discourse pragmatics, and sociolinguistic, is aimed at an international readership.

Table of Contents

List of figuresp. x
List of tables xiv
Prefacep. xix
Abbreviations and symbolic conventionsp. xxv
Introduction: 'grammar blindness' in the recent history of English?p. 1
Grammar is more than an arbitrary list of shibbolethsp. 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 Englishp. 16
Conclusionp. 22
Comparative corpus linguistics: the methodological basis of this bookp. 24
(Computer) corpus linguistics: the Brown Corpus and afterp. 24
Comparable corpora and comparative corpus linguisticsp. 27
The methodological basis of comparable corpus linguisticsp. 31
Stages of investigationp. 33
Rationalize the mark-up of the corporap. 33
Undertake annotation of the corporap. 33
Use search and retrieval software to identify and extract recurrent formal features in the corpusp. 34
Refine the comparative analysisp. 34
Derive difference-of-frequency tablesp. 35
Derive difference-of-frequency tables from inter-corpus comparisonsp. 36
Undertake further categorization of instances of features found in the corporap. 36
Further qualitative analysis, examining individual instances, or clusters of instances, in both corporap. 37
Functional interpretation of findingsp. 37
Further details and explanations of the stages of investigationp. 37
(B) Annotationp. 37
(C) Search expressions in CQPp. 38
(D1) Frequency across genres and subcorporap. 40
(D2) External comparisonsp. 43
(D3) Further categorization of instances found in the corporap. 45
(E) Further qualitative analysisp. 47
(F) Functional interpretation of findings on all levelsp. 49
Conclusionp. 50
The subjunctive moodp. 51
Introductionp. 51
The revival of the mandative subjunctivep. 52
Overall developments of the mandative subjunctivep. 53
Is the mandative subjunctive losing its formal connotations?p. 57
The were-subjunctivep. 61
The were-subjunctive: diachronic developmentp. 64
The were-subjunctive: a recessive formal option?p. 66
Revival and demise of the subjunctive? An attempt at reconciling apparently contradictory developmentsp. 67
Summary and conclusionp. 69
The modal auxiliariesp. 71
The declining use of the modal auxiliaries in written standard English 1961-1991/2p. 71
The changing use of the modals in different genres and subcorporap. 73
The changing use of the modals in spoken vs written corporap. 76
The core modals and competing expressions of modalityp. 78
Shrinking usage of particular modals: a more detailed examinationp. 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 shouldp. 83
Conclusionp. 89
The so-called semi-modalsp. 91
Auxiliary-lexical verb gradiencep. 92
Overall changes in frequency of semi-modalsp. 98
Further evidence for grammaticalization? Phonetics and semanticsp. 105
Phonetic reduction and coalescence: gonna, gotta and wannap. 105
Signs of abstraction and generalization (semantic weakening)p. 107
The ecology of obligation/necessityp. 114
Conclusionp. 116
The progressivep. 118
Introductionp. 118
Basic and special uses of the progressivep. 119
Historical backgroundp. 120
Overview of recent distribution patternsp. 122
Distribution in written BrE and AmEp. 122
Distribution in contemporaneous BrE speech and other registersp. 124
Present progressive activep. 127
Quotations and contracted formsp. 128
Stative verbsp. 129
Subject type and referencep. 130
Special usesp. 131
The progressive passivep. 136
The progressive in combination with modal auxiliariesp. 139
Modal auxiliary + be -ingp. 139
Will + be -ingp. 139
Summary and conclusionp. 141
The passive voicep. 144
Introductionp. 144
The be-passivep. 148
The get-passivep. 154
The mediopassivep. 158
Summary and conclusionp. 164
Take or have a look at a corpus? Expanded predicates in British and American Englishp. 166
The state of the artp. 167
Hypothesesp. 170
Defining the variablep. 173
Resultsp. 174
Stylistic variationp. 174
Diachronic variationp. 175
Regional variationp. 175
Summaryp. 179
Non-finite clausesp. 181
Introduction: long-term trends in the evolution of English non-finite clausesp. 181
Changes in non-finite clauses I: case studies of individual matrix verbsp. 186
Help + infinitivep. 187
Prevent/stop + NP + (from) + gerundp. 193
Start and stop in catenative usesp. 195
Want top. 199
Assessing the speed of changesp. 201
Changes in non-finite clauses II: statistical trends in the tagged corporap. 201
Conclusionp. 204
The noun phrasep. 206
Parts of speech: an overall surveyp. 207
Nouns and noun sequencesp. 211
Common nounsp. 212
Proper nouns, including proper nouns as acronymsp. 212
Noun sequences and other juxtapositionsp. 214
Noun + common noun sequencesp. 216
Noun sequences with plural attributive nounsp. 219
Sequences of proper nounsp. 221
The s-genitive and the of-genitivep. 222
The s-genitivep. 223
The of-gentivep. 224
Relative clausesp. 226
Wh- relative clausesp. 228
That relative clausesp. 229
Zero relative clausesp. 231
Pied-piping vs preposition strandingp. 231
Summary and conclusionp. 233
Linguistic and other determinants of changep. 236
The functional and social processes of changep. 236
Grammaticalizationp. 237
Colloquializationp. 239
Contracted negatives and verb formsp. 240
Not-negation vs no-negationp. 241
Questionsp. 242
Other plausible grammatical signs of colloquializationp. 243
Punctuationp. 244
Problems and issues concerning colloquializationp. 245
Densification of contentp. 249
Americanization?p. 252
'Americanization' in relation to other trendsp. 256
'Americanization' and sociolinguistic globalizationp. 258
Other trendsp. 259
Democratization: ironing out differencesp. 259
Language prescriptionsp. 263
Analyticization?p. 264
Conclusionp. 267
The composition of the Brown Corpusp. 273
The C8 tagset used for part-of-speech tagging of the four corporap. 276
Additional statistical tables and charts 281
Referencesp. 314
Indexp. 335
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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