This master thesis is concerned with empty referential pronominal subjects in Old English prose. The study has investigated 450 occurrences of subjectless" sentences taken from a corpus consisting of eleven Old English prose texts. The aim of the investigation has been to describe the non-expression of referential subject pronouns, and attempt to determine whether any systematicity can be seen with regards to its syntactic properties. Certain pragmatic factors have also been considered. The study has been explorative in focus. Given that previous studies to a great extent have been based on very restricted data, it has been attempted to quantify the phenomenon to as high a degree as possible. The quantitative analysis is based on various st...
The paper investigates the conditions that determine the distribution of object pronouns in the peri...
Pronouns in Old English (OE) display striking differences from full noun phrases (NPs), maintaining ...
Old English (OE) and Modern English (ModE) differ significantly from each other, including the sound...
As Present-Day English with but a few exceptions requires fully overt referential subject pronouns i...
As Present-Day English with but a few exceptions requires fully overt referential subject pronouns i...
The possibility of referential null subjects in Old English has been the subject of conflicting asse...
The topic of this thesis is subjectless clauses in Old Swedish (1225–1526). The thesis focuses on re...
Building on previous studies that have discussed pronominal referencing in Old English (Traugott 199...
Building on previous studies that have discussed pronominal referencing in Old English (Traugott 199...
This article investigates the occurrence and distribution of referential null subjects in Middle Eng...
This article investigates the occurrence and distribution of referential null subjects in Middle Eng...
In the Germanic languages, unaccented pronominal subjects have been in use for quite some time, when...
Old English (OE) shows characteristic properties of a Verb Second (V2) language. However, certain ph...
Present-day English is unlike Old English in not using singular demonstrative pronouns with anaphori...
In the Germanic languages, unaccented pronominal subjects have been in use for quite some time, when...
The paper investigates the conditions that determine the distribution of object pronouns in the peri...
Pronouns in Old English (OE) display striking differences from full noun phrases (NPs), maintaining ...
Old English (OE) and Modern English (ModE) differ significantly from each other, including the sound...
As Present-Day English with but a few exceptions requires fully overt referential subject pronouns i...
As Present-Day English with but a few exceptions requires fully overt referential subject pronouns i...
The possibility of referential null subjects in Old English has been the subject of conflicting asse...
The topic of this thesis is subjectless clauses in Old Swedish (1225–1526). The thesis focuses on re...
Building on previous studies that have discussed pronominal referencing in Old English (Traugott 199...
Building on previous studies that have discussed pronominal referencing in Old English (Traugott 199...
This article investigates the occurrence and distribution of referential null subjects in Middle Eng...
This article investigates the occurrence and distribution of referential null subjects in Middle Eng...
In the Germanic languages, unaccented pronominal subjects have been in use for quite some time, when...
Old English (OE) shows characteristic properties of a Verb Second (V2) language. However, certain ph...
Present-day English is unlike Old English in not using singular demonstrative pronouns with anaphori...
In the Germanic languages, unaccented pronominal subjects have been in use for quite some time, when...
The paper investigates the conditions that determine the distribution of object pronouns in the peri...
Pronouns in Old English (OE) display striking differences from full noun phrases (NPs), maintaining ...
Old English (OE) and Modern English (ModE) differ significantly from each other, including the sound...