This paper investigates the developments of 'strengthened' possessives such as hers and hers (earlier her) through a fresh examination of a substantial number of Middle English texts. These forms are first found in North Midlands and West Midlands texts of the thirteenth century, with the later -n forms of Southeastern dialects representing dative case rather than true 'strengthened' possessives. While the -s forms developed in rather different ways, both resulted in a processing advantage, as they signal to the hearer that no head NP is following. It is suggested that considerations of language processing have the potential to give more coherence to the traditional concept of 'analogy'
In this paper I take up two appositive constructions observed in the history of English, namely, Spl...
The article concerns side forms of possessive pronouns my, your, one’s. Pronouns contracted forms in...
This study concerns the development of the determiners MINE/MY and THINE/THY in the Early Modern Eng...
This article argues that the possessive form of English nouns of non-living things tends to correlat...
This computer-aided statistical study has examined the changes which took place in the pronouns of a...
This paper focuses on contact interaction in the development of possessive constructions. In contra...
This paper presents the results of a corpus-based variationist analysis of have, have got and got in...
THEY, THEIR, and THEM are of Scandinavian origin, having entered English in the wake of the 9th-cent...
The shift from grammatical to natural gender in the history of English is often cited as one of the ...
In this paper I demonstrate how actively changing linguistic features can provide valuable evidence ...
This article claims for the need of considering external factors in order to attain an\ud explanatio...
After a brief review of the existing literature, this paper investigates the use of generic pronouns...
There are few features of the English language that have traditionally epitomised the influence of O...
In Modern English, EACH OTHER and ONE ANOTHER are morphologically fixed as reciprocal compound prono...
The aim of the present study is to examine the form (morphological and syntactic) and function (synt...
In this paper I take up two appositive constructions observed in the history of English, namely, Spl...
The article concerns side forms of possessive pronouns my, your, one’s. Pronouns contracted forms in...
This study concerns the development of the determiners MINE/MY and THINE/THY in the Early Modern Eng...
This article argues that the possessive form of English nouns of non-living things tends to correlat...
This computer-aided statistical study has examined the changes which took place in the pronouns of a...
This paper focuses on contact interaction in the development of possessive constructions. In contra...
This paper presents the results of a corpus-based variationist analysis of have, have got and got in...
THEY, THEIR, and THEM are of Scandinavian origin, having entered English in the wake of the 9th-cent...
The shift from grammatical to natural gender in the history of English is often cited as one of the ...
In this paper I demonstrate how actively changing linguistic features can provide valuable evidence ...
This article claims for the need of considering external factors in order to attain an\ud explanatio...
After a brief review of the existing literature, this paper investigates the use of generic pronouns...
There are few features of the English language that have traditionally epitomised the influence of O...
In Modern English, EACH OTHER and ONE ANOTHER are morphologically fixed as reciprocal compound prono...
The aim of the present study is to examine the form (morphological and syntactic) and function (synt...
In this paper I take up two appositive constructions observed in the history of English, namely, Spl...
The article concerns side forms of possessive pronouns my, your, one’s. Pronouns contracted forms in...
This study concerns the development of the determiners MINE/MY and THINE/THY in the Early Modern Eng...