In the course of the ME period, HAVE began to encroach on territory previously held by BE. According to Rydén and Brorström (1987); Kytö (1997), this occurred especially in iterative and durational contexts, in the perfect infinitive and modal constructions. In Early Modern English (henceforth EModE), BE was increasingly restricted to the most common intransitives come and go, before disappearing entirely in the 18th and 19th centuries. This development raises a number of questions, both historical and theoretical. First, why did HAVE start spreading at the expense of BE in the first place? Second, why was the change conditioned by the factors mentioned by Rydén and Brorström (1987) and Kytö (1997)? Third, why did the change take on the ord...
In this study, we revisit the history of the English dative and benefactive alternations in the lig...
This paper revisits the historical shift in English verb-particle combinations from prefixed to prep...
An interesting and understudied set of early English constructions that served as ‘simple introducto...
The retreat of BE as perfect auxiliary in the history of English is examined. Corpus data are presen...
This paper examines the development of periphrastic constructions involving auxiliary "have" and "be...
In this paper, we will argue for a novel analysis of the auxiliary alternation in Early English, its...
Like many Germanic languages, English has developed specific periphrastic constructions to express ...
In older forms of English, both HAVE and BE were used as perfect auxiliaries, but the latter has bee...
In this talk I contrast the developments of the disappearing copula and passive auxiliary (ge)weorða...
In this article, we account for the preservation of the English inseparable prefix be- beyond early ...
Languages have diverse characteristics that have emerged through evolution. In modern English gramma...
International audienceIn this talk we provide a detailed account of the formal, functional and seman...
So far the perfective construction of intransitive verbs, which apart from the dominant auxiliary ve...
English has an extraordinary number of labile verbs, that is, verbs that can be used both transitive...
This chapter uses data from the Old Bailey Corpus to study the demise of the English be-perfect betw...
In this study, we revisit the history of the English dative and benefactive alternations in the lig...
This paper revisits the historical shift in English verb-particle combinations from prefixed to prep...
An interesting and understudied set of early English constructions that served as ‘simple introducto...
The retreat of BE as perfect auxiliary in the history of English is examined. Corpus data are presen...
This paper examines the development of periphrastic constructions involving auxiliary "have" and "be...
In this paper, we will argue for a novel analysis of the auxiliary alternation in Early English, its...
Like many Germanic languages, English has developed specific periphrastic constructions to express ...
In older forms of English, both HAVE and BE were used as perfect auxiliaries, but the latter has bee...
In this talk I contrast the developments of the disappearing copula and passive auxiliary (ge)weorða...
In this article, we account for the preservation of the English inseparable prefix be- beyond early ...
Languages have diverse characteristics that have emerged through evolution. In modern English gramma...
International audienceIn this talk we provide a detailed account of the formal, functional and seman...
So far the perfective construction of intransitive verbs, which apart from the dominant auxiliary ve...
English has an extraordinary number of labile verbs, that is, verbs that can be used both transitive...
This chapter uses data from the Old Bailey Corpus to study the demise of the English be-perfect betw...
In this study, we revisit the history of the English dative and benefactive alternations in the lig...
This paper revisits the historical shift in English verb-particle combinations from prefixed to prep...
An interesting and understudied set of early English constructions that served as ‘simple introducto...