In this paper, we draw on a socially stratified corpus of dialect data collected in north-east England to test recent proposals that grammaticalization processes are implicated in the synchronic variability of general extenders (GEs), i.e., phrase- or clause-final constructions such as and that and or something. Combining theoretical insights from the framework of grammaticalization with the empirical methods of variationist sociolinguistics, we operationalize key diagnostics of grammaticalization (syntagmatic length, decategorialization, semantic-pragmatic change) as independent factor groups in the quantitative analysis of GE variability. While multivariate analyses reveal rapid changes in apparent time to the social conditioning of some ...
In evolutionary linguistics (not to be confused with biolinguistics) (Steels 2011), languages are co...
In north western varieties of British English the historical process of ng-coalescence that simplifi...
This volume collects novel contributions to comparative generative linguistics that “rethink” existi...
In this paper, we draw on a socially stratified corpus of dialect data collected in north-east Engla...
The comparative method of variationist sociolinguistics has demonstrated that frequency changes are ...
The English go future, a quintessential example of grammaticalization, has shown layering with will ...
Language users are creatures of habit with a tendency to re-use morphosyntactic material that they h...
ERRATUM 24 October 2018: Marie Møller Jensen, Erratum: Two directions of change in one corpus phon...
We report on an ongoing project that applies the Probabilistic Grammar framework (e.g. Bresnan 2007)...
The English go future, a quintessential example of grammaticalization, has shown layering with will ...
Linguistic changes involving competition between two alternative forms are investigated with three c...
This thesis presents a study of socially-conditioned phonological variation in a hitherto unresearch...
General extenders (such as and stuff) are analysed here in the speech of adolescents from three Engl...
Sociolinguistics has rarely engaged in investigations of lexis arguing the unsuitability of its meth...
© Cambridge University Press 2015. In this chapter, we use a fairly liberal definition of “grammatic...
In evolutionary linguistics (not to be confused with biolinguistics) (Steels 2011), languages are co...
In north western varieties of British English the historical process of ng-coalescence that simplifi...
This volume collects novel contributions to comparative generative linguistics that “rethink” existi...
In this paper, we draw on a socially stratified corpus of dialect data collected in north-east Engla...
The comparative method of variationist sociolinguistics has demonstrated that frequency changes are ...
The English go future, a quintessential example of grammaticalization, has shown layering with will ...
Language users are creatures of habit with a tendency to re-use morphosyntactic material that they h...
ERRATUM 24 October 2018: Marie Møller Jensen, Erratum: Two directions of change in one corpus phon...
We report on an ongoing project that applies the Probabilistic Grammar framework (e.g. Bresnan 2007)...
The English go future, a quintessential example of grammaticalization, has shown layering with will ...
Linguistic changes involving competition between two alternative forms are investigated with three c...
This thesis presents a study of socially-conditioned phonological variation in a hitherto unresearch...
General extenders (such as and stuff) are analysed here in the speech of adolescents from three Engl...
Sociolinguistics has rarely engaged in investigations of lexis arguing the unsuitability of its meth...
© Cambridge University Press 2015. In this chapter, we use a fairly liberal definition of “grammatic...
In evolutionary linguistics (not to be confused with biolinguistics) (Steels 2011), languages are co...
In north western varieties of British English the historical process of ng-coalescence that simplifi...
This volume collects novel contributions to comparative generative linguistics that “rethink” existi...