It is commonly held that Present-Day English they, their, them are not descended from Old English but derive from the Old Norse third-person plural pronouns þeir, þeira, þeim. This paper argues that the early northern English orthographic and distributional textual evidence agrees with an internal trajectory for the ‘þ-’ type personal pronouns in the North and indicates an origin in the Old English demonstratives þā, þāra, þām. The Northern Middle English third-person plural pronominal system was the result of the reanalysis from demonstrative to personal pronoun that is common cross-linguistically in Germanic and non-Germanic languages alike
The shift from grammatical to natural gender in the history of English is often cited as one of the ...
It is suggested in this paper that the problematic third person singular present indicative verbal e...
Pronouns in Old English (OE) display striking differences from full noun phrases (NPs), maintaining ...
There are few features of the English language that have traditionally epitomised the influence of O...
THEY, THEIR, and THEM are of Scandinavian origin, having entered English in the wake of the 9th-cent...
Present-day English is unlike Old English in not using singular demonstrative pronouns with anaphori...
The main way of marking third person plural present tense indicative verbs in Early Modern London, s...
This article presents new evidence for the early history of the Northern Subject Rule in the form of...
This article presents new evidence for the early history of the Northern Subject Rule in the form of...
Contemporary varieties of English display word-initial th- across grammatical forms: definite articl...
Singular 'they 'enjoys a curious notoriety in popular discussions of English grammar. Despite this, ...
The paper investigates the conditions that determine the distribution of object pronouns in the peri...
The diachronic emergence of the demonstratives 'these' and 'those' resulted from numerous systemic a...
Building on previous studies that have discussed pronominal referencing in Old English (Traugott 199...
A frequent result produced by a search of the digital corpora of Middle English (henceforth ME) for ...
The shift from grammatical to natural gender in the history of English is often cited as one of the ...
It is suggested in this paper that the problematic third person singular present indicative verbal e...
Pronouns in Old English (OE) display striking differences from full noun phrases (NPs), maintaining ...
There are few features of the English language that have traditionally epitomised the influence of O...
THEY, THEIR, and THEM are of Scandinavian origin, having entered English in the wake of the 9th-cent...
Present-day English is unlike Old English in not using singular demonstrative pronouns with anaphori...
The main way of marking third person plural present tense indicative verbs in Early Modern London, s...
This article presents new evidence for the early history of the Northern Subject Rule in the form of...
This article presents new evidence for the early history of the Northern Subject Rule in the form of...
Contemporary varieties of English display word-initial th- across grammatical forms: definite articl...
Singular 'they 'enjoys a curious notoriety in popular discussions of English grammar. Despite this, ...
The paper investigates the conditions that determine the distribution of object pronouns in the peri...
The diachronic emergence of the demonstratives 'these' and 'those' resulted from numerous systemic a...
Building on previous studies that have discussed pronominal referencing in Old English (Traugott 199...
A frequent result produced by a search of the digital corpora of Middle English (henceforth ME) for ...
The shift from grammatical to natural gender in the history of English is often cited as one of the ...
It is suggested in this paper that the problematic third person singular present indicative verbal e...
Pronouns in Old English (OE) display striking differences from full noun phrases (NPs), maintaining ...