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Grammatical change in English world-wide /

This chapter examines the use of the progressive aspect in Black South African English (BSAfE) since the late 19th century in corpora of fiction and newspapers. Previous research points to on-going change in native varieties and the extension to stative contexts in non-native varieties of English. T...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Otros Autores: Collins, Peter, 1950-
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Amsterdam ; Philadelphia : John Benjamins Publishing Company, [2015]
Colección:Studies in corpus linguistics ; v. 67.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Grammatical Change in English World-Wide; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Table of contents; Introduction; References; Part 1. Inner circle Englishes; Diachronic variation in the grammar of Australian English; 1. Introduction; 2. The study of grammatical change in AusE; 3. Corpora and methodology; 3.1 The corpora; 3.2 The methodology; 4. Morphological variables; 4.1 Regularisation of irregular past tense and past participle forms; 4.2 's-genitives ; 5. Morphosyntactic variables; 5.1 The subjunctive; 5.1.1 The mandative subjunctive.
  • 5.1.2 The were-subjunctive in hypothetical conditional and concessive clauses5.2 Concord with collective nouns ; 6. Syntactic variables; 6.1 Light verbs; 6.2 Non-finite complementation with help and prevent; 6.2.1 Help (NP) (to) V; 6.2.2 Prevent NP (from) Ving; 6.3 Do-support (with negation) ; 6.4 Be-passives ; 7. Conclusion; Acknowledgement; References; At the crossroads of change; 1. Introduction; 2. The history of English have and the transatlantic divide; 3. Victoria (British Columbia, Canada) as a sociolinguistic entity; 4. Data and methods; 4.1 The British Colonist; 4.2 Methodology.
  • 5. Results5.1 Overall trends; 5.2 A closer look at have got; 6. Discussion and conclusion; References; Do-support in early New Zealand and Australian English; 1. Introduction; 2. Background to the study; 2.1 A brief comparative history of Australian and New Zealand English ; 2.2 Do-support in Late Modern English; 3. Data and methodology; 3.1 Corpora of early southern hemisphere English; 3.2 Definition of the variable and data retrieval; 4. Findings; 4.1 Negation; 4.2 Lexical have; 5. Conclusion; References; Appendix; Acknowledgements; The progressive in Irish English; 1. Introduction.
  • 2. The corpora3. Progressives; 3.1 The event or activity progressive; 3.2 The habitual bounded progressive; 3.3 The habitual nonbounded progressive ; 3.4 The single-occasion repetitive progressive; 3.5 The futurate progressive; 3.6 The mental nonbounded progressive; 3.7 The mental bounded progressive; 3.8 The punctual progressive; 3.9 The agentive stative progressive; 3.10 The non-agentive stative progressive; 3.11 The WILL progressive, or the future as matter of course progressive; 3.12 The modal progressive; 3.13 The DO progressive; 3.14 The extended-now progressive.
  • 3.15 The attitudinal progressive3.16 The interpretive progressive; 3.17 The generic progressive; 3.18 The politeness progressive; 3.19 The resultative progressive; 3.20 The anaphoric progressive; 4. Progressive: Comparisons and results; 4.1 The event or activity progressive: Analysis (3.1); 4.2 The habitual nonbounded progressive: Analysis (3.3); 4.3 The single occasion repetitive progressive: Analysis (3.4); 4.4 The futurate progressive: Analysis (3.5); 4.5 The nonbounded stative progressive: Analysis (3.6) ; 4.6 WILL be V-ing progressive: Analysis (3.11)