Building on previous studies that have discussed pronominal referencing in Old English (Traugott 1992; van Gelderen 2013; van Kemenade & Los 2017), the present study analyses the pronominal anaphoric strategies of the West Saxon dialect of Old English based on a quantitative and qualitative study of personal and demonstrative pronoun usage across a selection of late (post c. AD 900) Old English prose text types. The historical data discussed in the present study provide important additional support for modern cognitive and psycholinguistic theory. In line with the cognitive/psycholinguistic literature on the distribution of pronouns in Modern German (Bosch & Umbach 2007), the information-structural properties of referents rather than the gr...
It is widely accepted that Old English personal pronouns often turn up in ‘special’ positions, i.e. ...
This paper presents an example of a historical study based on comparable corpora. It aims to analyse...
The shift from grammatical to natural gender in the history of English is often cited as one of the ...
Building on previous studies that have discussed pronominal referencing in Old English (Traugott 199...
Present-day English is unlike Old English in not using singular demonstrative pronouns with anaphori...
The problem of anaphoric reference and participant identification in Early Old English is discussed....
This master thesis is concerned with empty referential pronominal subjects in Old English prose. The...
THEY, THEIR, and THEM are of Scandinavian origin, having entered English in the wake of the 9th-cent...
THEY, THEIR, and THEM are of Scandinavian origin, having entered English in the wake of the 9th-cent...
Pronouns in Old English (OE) display striking differences from full noun phrases (NPs), maintaining ...
In this paper, we examine how the three pronouns it, that and this developed between the early moder...
Abstract The Old English noun phrase displays more variation in word order than its Present-day Engl...
Proper noun genitives and possessive pronouns occur more frequently in postnominal position than com...
The paper investigates the conditions that determine the distribution of object pronouns in the peri...
Proper noun genitives and possessive pronouns occur more frequently in postnominal position than com...
It is widely accepted that Old English personal pronouns often turn up in ‘special’ positions, i.e. ...
This paper presents an example of a historical study based on comparable corpora. It aims to analyse...
The shift from grammatical to natural gender in the history of English is often cited as one of the ...
Building on previous studies that have discussed pronominal referencing in Old English (Traugott 199...
Present-day English is unlike Old English in not using singular demonstrative pronouns with anaphori...
The problem of anaphoric reference and participant identification in Early Old English is discussed....
This master thesis is concerned with empty referential pronominal subjects in Old English prose. The...
THEY, THEIR, and THEM are of Scandinavian origin, having entered English in the wake of the 9th-cent...
THEY, THEIR, and THEM are of Scandinavian origin, having entered English in the wake of the 9th-cent...
Pronouns in Old English (OE) display striking differences from full noun phrases (NPs), maintaining ...
In this paper, we examine how the three pronouns it, that and this developed between the early moder...
Abstract The Old English noun phrase displays more variation in word order than its Present-day Engl...
Proper noun genitives and possessive pronouns occur more frequently in postnominal position than com...
The paper investigates the conditions that determine the distribution of object pronouns in the peri...
Proper noun genitives and possessive pronouns occur more frequently in postnominal position than com...
It is widely accepted that Old English personal pronouns often turn up in ‘special’ positions, i.e. ...
This paper presents an example of a historical study based on comparable corpora. It aims to analyse...
The shift from grammatical to natural gender in the history of English is often cited as one of the ...