In this paper we examine the relation between the loss of formal gender and Case features on simple demonstratives and the topic shifting property they manifest. The examination period spans between Old English and Early Middle English. While we argue that this loss has important discourse-pragmatic and derivational effects on demonstratives, we also employ the Strong Minimalist Hypothesis approach (Chomsky 2001) and feature valuation, as defined in Pesetsky & Torrego (2007), to display how their syntactic computation and pragmatic properties have come about. To account for the above innovations yielding the Early Middle English ϸe (‘the’), we first discuss the formal properties of the Old English demonstratives which distinguish nu...
Old English exhibits asymmetry in the subject position in the matrix topic-initial context : a full ...
The paper argues that names constitute a primary linguistic category: they do not constitute a subcl...
The paper argues that names constitute a primary linguistic category: they do not constitute a subcl...
In this paper we examine the relation between the loss of formal gender and Case features on simple...
In this paper we examine the relation between the loss of formal gender and Case features on simple ...
The shift from grammatical to natural gender in the history of English is often cited as one of the ...
The shift from grammatical to natural gender in the history of English is often cited as one of the ...
This paper discusses the development of adjectives in Old English, Middle English, and Modern Englis...
This paper discusses the development of adjectives in Old English, Middle English, and Modern Englis...
This thesis investigates the history of the Middle English demonstratives these and those with a str...
In this work we will see how gender has changed during the centuries, starting out with the reconstr...
Gender-assignment and -exponence changed dramatically from Old to Middle English. This paper provide...
This dissertation focuses on gender-related terms as well as adjectives and demonstratives in connec...
This thesis investigates the history of the Middle English demonstratives these and those with a str...
Old English exhibits asymmetry in the subject position in the matrix topic-initial context : a full ...
Old English exhibits asymmetry in the subject position in the matrix topic-initial context : a full ...
The paper argues that names constitute a primary linguistic category: they do not constitute a subcl...
The paper argues that names constitute a primary linguistic category: they do not constitute a subcl...
In this paper we examine the relation between the loss of formal gender and Case features on simple...
In this paper we examine the relation between the loss of formal gender and Case features on simple ...
The shift from grammatical to natural gender in the history of English is often cited as one of the ...
The shift from grammatical to natural gender in the history of English is often cited as one of the ...
This paper discusses the development of adjectives in Old English, Middle English, and Modern Englis...
This paper discusses the development of adjectives in Old English, Middle English, and Modern Englis...
This thesis investigates the history of the Middle English demonstratives these and those with a str...
In this work we will see how gender has changed during the centuries, starting out with the reconstr...
Gender-assignment and -exponence changed dramatically from Old to Middle English. This paper provide...
This dissertation focuses on gender-related terms as well as adjectives and demonstratives in connec...
This thesis investigates the history of the Middle English demonstratives these and those with a str...
Old English exhibits asymmetry in the subject position in the matrix topic-initial context : a full ...
Old English exhibits asymmetry in the subject position in the matrix topic-initial context : a full ...
The paper argues that names constitute a primary linguistic category: they do not constitute a subcl...
The paper argues that names constitute a primary linguistic category: they do not constitute a subcl...