This chapter uses data from the Old Bailey Corpus to study the demise of the English be-perfect between the 1720s and 1910s. The corpus provides ample evidence on the development in the period that saw the transition from be to have as perfect auxiliary in constructions with mutative verbs (i.e., intransitive verbs referring to change of state or place); it also makes it possible to gauge the relative importance that social factors (such as speaker sex, speaker role or socio-economic background) may have played in the loss of one of the perfect variants. The stages for the development are derived from the data in a bottom-up approach using Variability-based Neighbour Clustering (VNC). In a second step, random forests and conditional inferen...
Past studies of the variable (ING) have demonstrated regular and stable social and stylistic conditi...
Languages have diverse characteristics that have emerged through evolution. In modern English gramma...
In this paper, we will argue for a novel analysis of the auxiliary alternation in Early English, its...
The English to-infinitival perfect (as in She claims to have seen him) has not received the same at...
This paper examines modifications in the phonotactic system of English, as attested in changes that ...
On the basis of an investigation of a corpus of 5.5 million words, this thesis analyses the use of t...
Eighteenth-century English is often associated with normative grammar. But to what extent did prescr...
This paper examines the development of periphrastic constructions involving auxiliary "have" and "be...
International audienceIn this talk we provide a detailed account of the formal, functional and seman...
This paper examines modifications in the phonotactic system of English, as attested in changes that ...
The retreat of BE as perfect auxiliary in the history of English is examined. Corpus data are presen...
This paper is a review of the evidence and arguments that have been put forward for a major causal r...
Like many Germanic languages, English has developed specific periphrastic constructions to express ...
Past studies of the variable (ING) have demonstrated regular and stable social and stylistic conditi...
English has an extraordinary number of labile verbs, that is, verbs that can be used both transitive...
Past studies of the variable (ING) have demonstrated regular and stable social and stylistic conditi...
Languages have diverse characteristics that have emerged through evolution. In modern English gramma...
In this paper, we will argue for a novel analysis of the auxiliary alternation in Early English, its...
The English to-infinitival perfect (as in She claims to have seen him) has not received the same at...
This paper examines modifications in the phonotactic system of English, as attested in changes that ...
On the basis of an investigation of a corpus of 5.5 million words, this thesis analyses the use of t...
Eighteenth-century English is often associated with normative grammar. But to what extent did prescr...
This paper examines the development of periphrastic constructions involving auxiliary "have" and "be...
International audienceIn this talk we provide a detailed account of the formal, functional and seman...
This paper examines modifications in the phonotactic system of English, as attested in changes that ...
The retreat of BE as perfect auxiliary in the history of English is examined. Corpus data are presen...
This paper is a review of the evidence and arguments that have been put forward for a major causal r...
Like many Germanic languages, English has developed specific periphrastic constructions to express ...
Past studies of the variable (ING) have demonstrated regular and stable social and stylistic conditi...
English has an extraordinary number of labile verbs, that is, verbs that can be used both transitive...
Past studies of the variable (ING) have demonstrated regular and stable social and stylistic conditi...
Languages have diverse characteristics that have emerged through evolution. In modern English gramma...
In this paper, we will argue for a novel analysis of the auxiliary alternation in Early English, its...