Nonfinite structures in theory and change:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Oxford [u.a.]
Oxford Univ. Press
2002
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Ausgabe: | 1. publ. |
Schriftenreihe: | Oxford linguistics
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXII, 462 S. graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 0198299605 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Nonfinite structures in theory and change |c D. Gary Miller |
250 | |a 1. publ. | ||
264 | 1 | |a Oxford [u.a.] |b Oxford Univ. Press |c 2002 | |
300 | |a XXII, 462 S. |b graph. Darst. | ||
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650 | 7 | |a Werkwoordsvormen |2 gtt | |
650 | 4 | |a Englisch | |
650 | 4 | |a Geschichte | |
650 | 4 | |a Grammatik | |
650 | 4 | |a English language |x History | |
650 | 4 | |a Grammar, Comparative and general |x Syntax | |
650 | 4 | |a Linguistic change | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Contents
Preface xv
Dating and Other Conventions xvii
List of Abbreviations xix
INTRODUCTION i
The Nature of Nonfinite Structures 1
Assumptions about Language Change 2
Plan of the Book 4
1 CASE CHECKING AND ACCORD 11
1.0 Introduction 11
1.1 General case theory 11
1.1.1 Types of case 11
1.1.1.1 Structural case 12
1.1.1.2 Inherent case 12
1.1.1.3 Semantic case 13
1.1.1.4 Default case 14
1.1.2 Case accommodation 15
1.1.3 P case: structural and inherent case accommodation (Latin) 16
1.2 Case and Accord 17
1.2.1 Syntactic case (licensing) and morphological (m )case 17
1.2.2 The case agreement interrelation: Accord 19
1.2.3 Multiple case checking 20
1.3 Case checking, raising, and AI in Latin 22
1.3.1 The Latin accusative and infinitive 22
1.3.2 Raising and impersonal verbs 25
1.4 Conclusion 27
1.4.1 Case theory and Accord: summary 27
2 TENSE AND NONFINITE CLAUSES 29
2.0 Introduction 29
2.1 The problem of tense 30
2.1.1 Tense as a theoretical construct 30
2.1.2 Tense and event time 31
2.2 Infinitives with tense 34
2.2.1 M tensed infinitives in Ancient Greek 34
vi Contents
2.2.2 Infinitives with m tense: Latin and Turkish 36
2.2.3 Reflective verbs, infinitival tense, and eventive predicates 37
2.3 Infinitival structures with and without tense 39
2.3.1 Restructuring 39
2.3.2 Restructuring and non restructuring verbs 41
2.4 Gerundial and infinitival complements 42
2.4.1 Temporal Interpretation 42
2.4.2 Infinitive and gerundial selection 44
2.5 Conclusion 47
2.5.1 Tense and nonfinite structures 47
3 NULL SUBJECTS AND CONTROL 49
3.0 Introduction 49
3.1 Control 50
3.1.1 Obligatory and non obligatory control 50
3.1.1.1 The classical view 50
3.1.1.2 A reclassification of OC and NOC 51
3.1.2 Some recent accounts of obligatory control 52
3.1.2.1 Movement accounts 52
3.1.2.2 Accounts with no infinitival subject position 53
3.1.2.3 Locality accounts and control shift 54
3.1.2.4 An account based on tense and agreement 55
3.1.3 Accounts of non obligatory control 56
3.1.3.1 Arbitrary control and implicit datives 56
3.1.3.2 Implicit agents and rationale clauses 58
3.1.3.3 Criteria for genuine non obligatory control 60
3.1.3.4 NOC, logophoricity, and inalienable possession 61
3.2 The case of PRO 62
3.2.1 The Null Case hypothesis 62
3.2.2 The position of PRO 63
3.2.3 PRO and [ actualized] case 65
3.3 The distribution of PRO 66
3.3.1 PRO and lexical subjects 66
3.3.2 Infinitival mood and null subjects 68
3.3.3 Speculations on PRO and Switch Reference 71
3.3.4 Consequences and conclusions 72
4 PLAIN AND CONJUGATED INFINITIVES 75
4.0 Introduction 75
4.1 Portuguese 76
4.1.1 Core infinitival structures 76
4.1.2 Subject and object control 77
4.1.3 Prepositional infinitival clauses 78
4.1.4 Bridge and factive complements 79
Contents vii
4.1.5 Extraction from infinitival structures 82
4.1.6 Accord and raising 84
4.2 Hungarian 86
4.2.1 Distribution of PI and CI 86
4.2.2 Dative case and Accord 88
4.2.3 Portuguese and Hungarian compared 89
4.3 Welsh 90
4.3.1 PRO and the Status of agreement 90
4.3.2 Account of the Welsh distribution 91
4.4 Modern Greek 93
4.4.1 General description 93
4.4.2 Control 95
4.4.3 Other accounts 96
4.4.4 Structure of the Balkan infinitival 98
4.4.5 Perception and epistemic complements 100
4.4.6 Causative complements 102
4.4.7 Tense contrasts and matrix case attraction 103
4.4.8 Linearization in matrix clauses 104
4.4.9 Linearization in embedded clauses 106
4.5 Conclusions 108
4.5.1 Piain and conjugated infinitives 108
4.5.2 Reflections on the morphology of control 109
5 WEST GREENLANDIC 111
5.0 Introduction 111
5.1 The contemporative mood 111
5.1.1 Agreement marking 111
5.1.2 Traditional infinitival account 113
5.1.3 Adjunct clauses 114
5.1.4 Purposives and quasi purposives 115
5.1.5 Object control verbs in a subject control structure 116
5.1.6 Control in complement structures 117
5.1.7 Implicit arguments and psychological subjects 118
5.1.8 Summary: functions and structures of the contemporative 120
5.2 The participial mood 121
5.2.1 A complementary non matrix formative 121
5.2.1.1 Formation 121
5.2.1.2 Relation to the contemporative: coreference and
switch reference 122
5.2.2 Participial functions 123
5.2.2.1 Relativization: case and number agreement 123
5.2.2.2 Absolute function 124
5.2.3 Conjugated infinitive 125
5.2.3.1 Verb complementation 125
5.2.3.2 Factivity, apposition, and Subordination 126
viii Contents
5.2.3.3 Complements of passivized matrix verb 127
5.2.4 Declined infinitive 128
5.2.4.1 Object complementation with non structural case 128
5.2.5 Perception and bridge verb complements 129
5.2.5.1 Perception and reflective functions 129
5.2.5.2 ECM/raising 13°
5.2.6 Conclusions 132
5.2.6.1 The participial mood: overview 132
5.2.6.2 Summary by form and function 133
5.2.6.3 Contemporative, participial, and switch reference 134
6 SMALL CLAUSES AND ECM 136
6.0 Introduction 136
6.1 Core properties of small clauses 137
6.1.1 Constituency and predication 137
6.1.2 Tense and the small clause 138
6.1.3 Extraction/raising out of small clauses 139
6.2 SC extensions: particle, preposition, complementizer 141
6.2.1 Affinities between SC particles and prepositions 141
6.2.2 SC particles and complementizers 142
6.3 SCs and ECM clauses with be 143
6.3.1 SCs as structures with null verb be 143
6.3.2 Optional merger with be 145
6.4 Towards an analysis of ECM in English 146
6.4.1 Evidence for raising: binding theory 146
6.4.2 Linearization evidence for overt raising 148
6.4.3 Auxiliaries, states, events, and adverbs of quantification 149
6.4.4 Tense and eventive predicates 150
6.5 Infinitival complements to reflective verbs in French 151
6.5.1 Preliminary Description 151
6.5.2 French RVICs in comparative perspective 153
6.5.3 An account of the French RVICs 154
6.5.4 Conclusion 156
7 THE ECM INNOVATION IN ENGLISH 157
7.0 Introduction 157
7.1 Recent accounts of the history of ECM 158
7.1.1 Control and ECM 158
7.1.2 ECM as a Latinate structure 159
7.1.3 ECM in glosses and translations 160
7.1.4 Association of the fo infinitive with ECM 161
7.1.5 Distinctions among reflective and ECM verbs 163
7.2 SC complements in historical perspective 164
7.2.1 SC complements to reflective verbs in Indo European 164 |
Contents ix
7.2.2 The small clause in Old English 166
7.2.3 Extraction/raising out of SCs in Old English 167
7.2.4 Locationals in SCs 169
7.2.5 Merger of SCs with be in Old English 170
7.2.6 Variation in translating Latin AI constructions 171
7.3 ECM in Late Old English and Middle English 172
7.3.1 Reflective verb complements in later OE 172
7.3.2 Verbs that avoided ECM 174
7.3.3 Continuity of SC complements to reflective verbs in ME 175
7.3.4 BE expansion of SCs and evolving contrasts in ME 176
7.3.5 Verba cogitandi et sciendi 177
7.3.6 ECM and passive raising 178
7.3.7 ECM and WH movement 179
7.4 Accord changes in English RVICs 180
7.4.1 [+Accord] infinitival complements in older English 180
7.4.2 The change in parameter setting 182
7.5 Conclusions 184
7.5.1 The rise of ECM 184
7.5.2 Summary of developments in the history of ECM 185
8 INFINITIVES IN OLDER ENGLISH 187
8.0 Introduction 187
8.1 Development of the to infinitive 188
8.1.1 From purposive adjunct to gerundive/infinitive argument 188
8.1.2 Adjective and verb complementation 189
8.2 Infinitives in Middle English 191
8.2.1 The three Middle English infinitives and aspect 191
8.2.2 Purposives 193
8.2.3 Adjectival complements 194
8.2.4 Noun complementation 195
8.3 Dative and infinitive 195
8.3.1 Old English 195
8.3.2 Middle English 197
8.3.3 Dative as infinitival subject 198
8.3.4 Optional case assigners 198
8.3.5 Infinitives with lexical subject 200
8.4 The for NP to INF reanalysis 201
8.4.1 Early examples 201
8.4.2 Synchronic alternations in Middle English 202
8.4.3 For to INF and For NP to INF 203
8.4.4 Reprise and conclusion 205
8.5 The interaction of adjectives and infinitives 207
8.5.1 Major adjectival classes 207
8.5.2 Groups I and II and evaluative gerundials 209
8.5.3 Group I adjectives: the null Operator analysis 212
x Contents
8.5.4 Group II adjectives: null Operator or movement? 213
8.5.5 Group I structures in Old and Middle English 215
8.5.6 Tough structures in Old English 216
8.5.7 Middle English changes in tough structures 217
8.6 Infinitival relatives and purposives 219
8.6.1 Modern English 219
8.6.2 Purposives and infinitival relatives in Old English 221
8.6.3 Purposives and infinitival relatives in Middle English 225
8.6.4 Purposives, infinitival relatives, and tough structures: conclusion 226
8.7 Structural evidence for the position of to 228
8.7.1 The split infinitive: Modern English 228
8.7.2 The split infinitive in Middle English 229
8.7.3 Adjunction, gapping, and deletion 231
8.7.4 The passive infinitive 233
8.8 Discussion of the Middle English changes 234
8.8.1 The TLI and the to infinitive 234
8.8.2 Changes in the Status of infinitival to 235
8.8.3 When did the category change of infinitival to occur? 236
8.8.4 Conclusion 239
9 THE ING PARTICIPLE AND PERCEPTION
COMPLEMENTS 242
9.0 Introduction 242
9.1 Direct and indirect perception 242
9.1.1 The to infinitive and the TLI contrasted 242
9.1.2 Perception predicates: event vs. proposition 245
9.1.3 The TLI as perception verb complement: against a bare VP shell 247
9.1.4 Elaborated VP shell structure of the TLI as PVC 248
9.2 ing as a perception verb complement 250
9.2.1 Problems with the ing formation 250
9.2.2 Perception and control structures 253
9.2.3 The TLI and ing PVC compared 256
9.3 Other constructions of the present participle 258
9.3.1 Participial adjuncts and reduced relatives 258
9.3.2 Gerundive relatives in English and elsewhere 259
9.3.3 The structure of participials and ing PVCs 260
9.4 PVCs in Old and Middle English 263
9.4.1 Aspect: infinitive and participle (Old English) 263
9.4.2 TLI and present participle (Middle English) 264
9.5 Development of the English progressive 266
9.5.1 Characterization of the progressive 266
9.5.2 Participles with be in yElfric and the Gospels 268
9.5.3 Aspectual and discourse functions 270
9.5.4 The (pre)progressive in Old and Early Middle English 271 ,
9.5.5 PrP and progressive in Middle English (Chaucer) 273 f
t
I
Contents xi
9.5.6 Grammaticalization, ergativity, and passivity 275
9.5.7 Syntactic overlap, motivation, and change 277
9.6 Conclusions 279
9.6.1 PrP and TLI 279
10 ENGLISH GERUNDIALS 282
10.0 Introduction 282
10.1 Gerundiais in Modern English 283
10.1.1 Gerundive, gerund, and ing nouns 283
10.1.2 Structure of the ACC ing gerundive 284
10.1.3 The gerund 286
10.1.4 The PRO ING and POSS ING gerundives 287
10.1.5 The clausal structure of POSS ING 289
10.1.6 Assignment/checking of genitive case 290
10.1.7 POSS ING and factivity 292
10.1.8 Other DP traits of POSS ING 296
10.1.9 More evidence for DP MP: the Hebrew gerund 297
10.2 Evaluatives and verbs of requirement 299
10.2.1 Gerundial complements of evaluative predicates 299
10.2.2 Gerundial complements of verbs of requirement 302
10.2.3 Retroactive gerundives and nominals 303
10.2.4 Active and passive gerundives: conclusion 304
10.3 Infinitive and gerundial: case theory predictions 306
10.3.1 Comp positions and case assignment 306
10.3.2 Intervening material and case assignment 309
10.3.3 Absolute constructions 310
10.3.4 Residual problems and conclusions 312
11 HISTORY OF ENGLISH GERUNDIALS 315
u.o Introduction 315
11.1 Development of the gerund in Old English 316
11.1.1 The gerund in late West Saxon 316
11.1.2 The changing distribution of ing and ung 317
11.1.3 Diffusion of ing from the old Danelaw 319
11.2 The gerund as object of a preposition 321
11.2.1 Native Old English origin and expansion 321
11.2.2 Syntactic continuity in La3amon 322
11.2.3 The be on ing syntagma in Early Middle English 323
11.2.4 Influence from other languages 325
11.3 Nouns in ing and gerundials in Middle English (Chaucer) 327
11.3.1 Nonverbal nouns 327
11.3.2 Gerund (nominal) 328
11.3.3 Gerund modifiers and compounding 330
11.3.4 Thematic role, voice, and the gerund 331
xii Contents
11.3.5 Gerundive 332
11.3.6 Competition between infinitive and gerundive 335
11.4 Origin and development of the gerundive 336
11.4.1 Potential sources and the problem of evidence 336
11.4.2 Earliest attested gerundives: Late Old English 338
11.4.3 Gerundives in ing in Early Middle English 34°
11.4.4 The gerundive in Classical Middle English 341
11.4.5 Gerundives in the colloquial language of the fifteenth Century 342
11.4.6 The fifteenth Century reconsidered 344
11.5 Subsequent history of the gerundive 345
11.5.1 Early Modern English 345
11.5.2 The modern period 347
11.5.3 Conclusions 348
12 INFINITIVE, GERUNDIVE, PARTICIPLE 351
12.0 Introduction 351
12.1 Gerund and infinitive 352
12.1.1 iElfric s grammar 352
12.2 Infinitive and future participle 354
12.2.1 The töcymende/töcomyng type 354
12.2.2 Infinitive and gerundive in tö ende/ inge 356
12.3 The deontic infinitive/gerundial with be 359
12.3.1 The D/NP movement type 359
12.3.2 The deontic infinitive with WH movement 361
12.3.3 Historical overview of the deontic infinitive 363
12.4 Competing gerundial formations 364
12.4.1 The gerundial in endel and 364
12.4.2 Prepositional infinitives 367
12.4.3 Participle, infinitive, and gerundial: summary 368
12.5 Overlapping of morpholexical categories 369
12.5.1 Early clausal adaptation of ing 369
12.5.2 Participle and gerundial 370
12.5.3 Participle and infinitive 372
12.6 Conclusions 373
12.6.1 Morphological generalizations across categories 373
12.6.2 Supercategories in typological perspective 375
12.6.3 Chronology of changes in English nonfinite structures 376
12.6.4 Final generalizations 380
PRIMARY SOURCES: TEXTS IN OLD AND
MIDDLE ENGLISH 383
English Texts and Editions 383
Special Letters and Symbols 383
Contents xiii
Special Abbreviations 383
English Text Abbreviations 383
Old English 385
jElfric, iÖfric s Colloquy
Bede, Beowulf, Chronicle
Cura Pastoralis., Durham Ritual
Gospels, Gregory s Dialogues, Laws
Orosius, Rule St Benet, Soliloquies of St Augustine
Vespasian Psalter, Wulfstan
Late Old English/Early Middle English [1100 1175] 393
Sermo in Festis Sanctae Mariae Virginis, Peterborough
Chronicle, (Late) West Saxon Gospel, Lambeth Homilies
Early Middle English [1175 1200] 393
Ormulum
Trinity Homilies, La3amon, Ancrene Wisse
[1200 1225] 394
Vices and Virtues, The Katherine Group
Pe Wohunge of Ure Lauerd
[1225 1275] 395
King Hörn, The Owl and the Nightingale, Bestiary,
Kentish Sermons
[1275 1310] 396
Kyng Alisaunder, Northern Homilies, Havelok,
Robert Mannyng of Brunne
[1310 1350] 397
Ayenbite oflnwyt, Cursor Mundi
Richard Rolle
Classical Middle English [1350 1385] 398
Earliest Complete English Prose Psalter, Alexander and
Dindimus, Romaunt of the Rose, Piers Plowman
Usk, Testament ofLove
[1385 1400] 399
Chaucer, Sir Gawain and the Green Knighv, Cleanness/Purity,
Patience, Pearl
Wyclif, Morte Arthure, The Cloud of Unknowing
Late Middle English [1400 1450] 400
Laces Makyng, London Grocers Company Records,
Promptorium Parvulorum
Catholicon Anglicum, Sir Thomas Malory
Editions of Older English Texts 402
References 408
Language Index 453
Subject Index 457
|
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id | DE-604.BV014093248 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T18:57:32Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0198299605 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-009654770 |
oclc_num | 48468377 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-739 DE-703 DE-12 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-83 DE-11 DE-188 |
owner_facet | DE-739 DE-703 DE-12 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-83 DE-11 DE-188 |
physical | XXII, 462 S. graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2002 |
publishDateSearch | 2002 |
publishDateSort | 2002 |
publisher | Oxford Univ. Press |
record_format | marc |
series2 | Oxford linguistics |
spelling | Miller, D. Gary Verfasser (DE-588)1024155838 aut Nonfinite structures in theory and change D. Gary Miller 1. publ. Oxford [u.a.] Oxford Univ. Press 2002 XXII, 462 S. graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Oxford linguistics Gerundium gtt Gerundivum gtt Onbepaalde wijs gtt Werkwoordsvormen gtt Englisch Geschichte Grammatik English language History Grammar, Comparative and general Syntax Linguistic change Sprachwandel (DE-588)4056508-7 gnd rswk-swf Infinitkonstruktion (DE-588)4120484-0 gnd rswk-swf Kontrastive Linguistik (DE-588)4073708-1 gnd rswk-swf Infinitkonstruktion (DE-588)4120484-0 s Sprachwandel (DE-588)4056508-7 s Kontrastive Linguistik (DE-588)4073708-1 s DE-604 HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=009654770&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Miller, D. Gary Nonfinite structures in theory and change Gerundium gtt Gerundivum gtt Onbepaalde wijs gtt Werkwoordsvormen gtt Englisch Geschichte Grammatik English language History Grammar, Comparative and general Syntax Linguistic change Sprachwandel (DE-588)4056508-7 gnd Infinitkonstruktion (DE-588)4120484-0 gnd Kontrastive Linguistik (DE-588)4073708-1 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4056508-7 (DE-588)4120484-0 (DE-588)4073708-1 |
title | Nonfinite structures in theory and change |
title_auth | Nonfinite structures in theory and change |
title_exact_search | Nonfinite structures in theory and change |
title_full | Nonfinite structures in theory and change D. Gary Miller |
title_fullStr | Nonfinite structures in theory and change D. Gary Miller |
title_full_unstemmed | Nonfinite structures in theory and change D. Gary Miller |
title_short | Nonfinite structures in theory and change |
title_sort | nonfinite structures in theory and change |
topic | Gerundium gtt Gerundivum gtt Onbepaalde wijs gtt Werkwoordsvormen gtt Englisch Geschichte Grammatik English language History Grammar, Comparative and general Syntax Linguistic change Sprachwandel (DE-588)4056508-7 gnd Infinitkonstruktion (DE-588)4120484-0 gnd Kontrastive Linguistik (DE-588)4073708-1 gnd |
topic_facet | Gerundium Gerundivum Onbepaalde wijs Werkwoordsvormen Englisch Geschichte Grammatik English language History Grammar, Comparative and general Syntax Linguistic change Sprachwandel Infinitkonstruktion Kontrastive Linguistik |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=009654770&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT millerdgary nonfinitestructuresintheoryandchange |