This paper aims to work toward a proper understanding of the role of preverbal ge- in Old English (henceforth OE) and its disappearance in the course of Middle English. This prefix is reminiscent of its cognates in Modern German and Dutch (also written ge-) in its distribution, but even a cursory examination of the details reveals it to be quite distinct, as we will see. The proper characterization of that distribution, and of its diachronic development, has proven to be extremely difficult. I have thus carried out a large-scale corpus study using the York-Toronto-Helsinki parsed corpus of Old English prose (Taylor et al. 2003) and the Penn-Helsinki parsed corpus of Middle English, 2nd ed. (Kroch & Taylor 1999). This paper will report the r...
In this paper, I present a novel corpus investigation of quantified and negated objects in the Middl...
This paper seeks to illustrate the influence of Old Norse on the English lexicon. The theoretical pa...
This article deals with the present and past participle of Old English. Its research method is based...
Background This paper aims to work toward a proper understanding of the role of preverbal ge-in Old ...
Today I’ll be talking about the OE prefix ge- in its pre-verbal uses. • ge- is quite slippery and ha...
The followmg paper reports on the results of 'the investigation into some aspects of the usage of th...
This article carries out an analysis of the Old English verbal prefix ge-that is based on a paradigm...
In contrast to the majority of works on the pre-verbal i-/y- in Middle English which usually attempt...
The present contribution discusses the phonological reality of initial fricative h- in words of Germ...
The Dutch prefix ge- in historical perspective gives first of all a general account of the developme...
Old English (OE) shows characteristic properties of a Verb Second (V2) language. However, certain ph...
Why does ga- not appear in the Gothic past participle while ge- does in Old English and German? The...
The paper investigates the conditions that determine the distribution of object pronouns in the peri...
A lexical category under functioned in Old English as a preposition, an adverb or a member of a com...
This journal article deals with Old English word-formation as represented by a derivational map. In ...
In this paper, I present a novel corpus investigation of quantified and negated objects in the Middl...
This paper seeks to illustrate the influence of Old Norse on the English lexicon. The theoretical pa...
This article deals with the present and past participle of Old English. Its research method is based...
Background This paper aims to work toward a proper understanding of the role of preverbal ge-in Old ...
Today I’ll be talking about the OE prefix ge- in its pre-verbal uses. • ge- is quite slippery and ha...
The followmg paper reports on the results of 'the investigation into some aspects of the usage of th...
This article carries out an analysis of the Old English verbal prefix ge-that is based on a paradigm...
In contrast to the majority of works on the pre-verbal i-/y- in Middle English which usually attempt...
The present contribution discusses the phonological reality of initial fricative h- in words of Germ...
The Dutch prefix ge- in historical perspective gives first of all a general account of the developme...
Old English (OE) shows characteristic properties of a Verb Second (V2) language. However, certain ph...
Why does ga- not appear in the Gothic past participle while ge- does in Old English and German? The...
The paper investigates the conditions that determine the distribution of object pronouns in the peri...
A lexical category under functioned in Old English as a preposition, an adverb or a member of a com...
This journal article deals with Old English word-formation as represented by a derivational map. In ...
In this paper, I present a novel corpus investigation of quantified and negated objects in the Middl...
This paper seeks to illustrate the influence of Old Norse on the English lexicon. The theoretical pa...
This article deals with the present and past participle of Old English. Its research method is based...