In this article, I relate the loss of weorðan in the past tense to the loss of an Old English grammatical subsystem that encouraged the expression of narrative by bounded sentence constructions. This type of construction represents a situation as reaching its goal or endpoint, and serves to mark progress in a narrative (e.g. then he walked over to the other side). Instead of this system, from Middle English onwards a mixed system emerges with differently structured bounded sentence constructions as well as, increasingly, unbounded sentence constructions – which structure events as open-ended, usually by means of a progressive form (e.g. he was walking). I show how weorðan in Old English was strongly associated with the Old English system of...
This paper revisits the historical shift in English verb-particle combinations from prefixed to prep...
The history of the English ‘passive’ construction: from intransitive predication to passive construc...
An interesting and understudied set of early English constructions that served as ‘simple introducto...
In this article, I relate the loss of weorðan in the past tense to the loss of an Old English gramma...
In this talk I contrast the developments of the disappearing copula and passive auxiliary (ge)weorða...
The present talk focuses on the replacement in the past tense of English weorðan ‘become’ by wesan ‘...
The passive construction consitutes a marked difference between English, which uses the auxiliary be...
Applying the framework of Radical Construction Grammar to diachronic phenomena, the present paper ex...
This article deals with the transitive construction involving habban and the past participle in Old ...
The rise and fall of the passive auxiliary weorðan (WERDEN) in the history of English is investigate...
peer reviewedWith the aid of a specially compiled corpus, this paper accounts for the replacement – ...
This monograph presents the first comprehensive diachronic account of copular and passive verb const...
This paper examines the development of periphrastic constructions involving auxiliary "have" and "be...
In Old English, passive-type constructions involving a copula and a passive participle could be used...
This paper examines the use of potential source lexemes of future markers in Old English, such as w...
This paper revisits the historical shift in English verb-particle combinations from prefixed to prep...
The history of the English ‘passive’ construction: from intransitive predication to passive construc...
An interesting and understudied set of early English constructions that served as ‘simple introducto...
In this article, I relate the loss of weorðan in the past tense to the loss of an Old English gramma...
In this talk I contrast the developments of the disappearing copula and passive auxiliary (ge)weorða...
The present talk focuses on the replacement in the past tense of English weorðan ‘become’ by wesan ‘...
The passive construction consitutes a marked difference between English, which uses the auxiliary be...
Applying the framework of Radical Construction Grammar to diachronic phenomena, the present paper ex...
This article deals with the transitive construction involving habban and the past participle in Old ...
The rise and fall of the passive auxiliary weorðan (WERDEN) in the history of English is investigate...
peer reviewedWith the aid of a specially compiled corpus, this paper accounts for the replacement – ...
This monograph presents the first comprehensive diachronic account of copular and passive verb const...
This paper examines the development of periphrastic constructions involving auxiliary "have" and "be...
In Old English, passive-type constructions involving a copula and a passive participle could be used...
This paper examines the use of potential source lexemes of future markers in Old English, such as w...
This paper revisits the historical shift in English verb-particle combinations from prefixed to prep...
The history of the English ‘passive’ construction: from intransitive predication to passive construc...
An interesting and understudied set of early English constructions that served as ‘simple introducto...