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E-raamat: Argument and Rhetoric: Adverbial Connectors in the History of English

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The book is the first corpus-based study giving a comprehensive overview of English items which have been used as adverbial connectors ('conjuncts', 'linking adverbials'), from Old English to Present-Day English. The author analyses different characteristics of the make-up, functions and use of connectives, and considers morphological and syntactic factors as well as pragmatic, textlinguistic and socio-cultural aspects.

The future of English linguistics as envisaged by the editors of Topics in English Linguistics lies in empirical studies, which integrate work in English linguistics into general and theoretical linguistics on the one hand, and comparative linguistics on the other. The TiEL series features volumes that present interesting new data and analyses, and above all fresh approaches that contribute to the overall aim of the series, which is to further outstanding research in English linguistics.

For further publications in English linguistics see also our Dialects of English book series.

To discuss your book idea or submit a proposal, please contact Natalie Fecher.



The future of English linguistics as envisaged by the editors of Topics in English Linguistics lies in empirical studies which integrate work in English linguistics into general and theoretical linguistics on the one hand, and comparative linguistics on the other. The TiEL series features volumes that present interesting new data and analyses, and above all fresh approaches that contribute to the overall aim of the series, which is to further outstanding research in English linguistics.

Acknowledgements v
List of abbreviations
xv
The framework
1(21)
Particles
1(1)
Earlier research
2(2)
Aims of the study
4(2)
Rhetoric and stylistic aspects: a sample study
6(3)
Early Modern and Late Modern English
9(1)
The inventory of adverbial connectors
9(1)
The text corpus
10(6)
Presentation of corpus findings
16(4)
Outline of the present study
20(2)
Clausal connection
22(11)
Clausal connection
22(1)
Connectors - connects: definitions
23(2)
Connectors: coordinating conjunctions, subordinating conjunctions, adverbial connectors
25(3)
Connectors and information processing
28(5)
The category ``adverb''
33(16)
Adverbs and adverbials
33(2)
Classification of adverbials
35(4)
``Circumstance adverbials'' or ``adjuncts''
36(1)
``Stance adverbials'' or ``disjuncts'' (content/attitudinal and style disjuncts)
36(1)
Adverbial connectors (``linking adverbials'' or ``conjuncts'')
37(2)
Semantic categories of adverbial connectors
39(2)
``Pure'' and ``impure'' connectives
41(1)
Adverbial connectors in Present Day English: corpus findings
42(4)
The corpus of the Longman Grammar
42(1)
Different types of adverbials over the core registers
42(1)
Syntactic realizations of adverbials
43(1)
Positions of adverbials
43(1)
Linking adverbials: distribution of semantic categories
44(1)
Summary: Present Day English corpus findings
45(1)
Adverbial connectors - discourse markers
46(3)
Adverbs and conjunctions in earlier metalinguistic thought
49(9)
Introductory remarks
49(1)
The Greek and Latin tradition
49(2)
Ælfric's Old English Grammar
51(2)
Grammatical treatises of the Middle English period
53(1)
The prologue to the revision of the Wycliffite Bible
54(2)
Early Modern English dictionaries and grammars
56(2)
Connectors in Old English
58(18)
Semantic and syntactic polyfunctionality
58(1)
Circumstance adverbs with connective force (Group B-a): temporal and spatial adverbs
59(5)
OE eft `again'
60(1)
OE nu `now' (Group B-a, Group C)
61(1)
Temporal nu
61(1)
Text-deictic nu
61(1)
Adverbial connector nu - Transition/Result
62(1)
Adverb/conjunction nu in correlative constructions
62(1)
Conjunction (subordinator) nu
63(1)
Ambiguous adverbs/conjunctions (Group C)
64(3)
OE pa
64(2)
OE peah, swapeah, (swa)peahhwæpere - Contrast/Concession
66(1)
Position of adverbial connectors
67(5)
Nacherstposition - `post-first-position'
67(1)
Present Day German adverbial connectors in post-first-position
68(2)
Post-first-position of adverbial connectors in Old English
70(2)
Pronominal connectors
72(4)
Pronominal connectors in Old English
72(1)
Pronominal connectors in the history of the Romance languages
73(1)
Connectors in Louisiana French and French-based creoles
74(2)
Adverbial connectors in the history of English
76(12)
Introductory remarks
76(1)
The diachrony of coordinating and subordinating conjunctions: general tendencies
76(1)
The diachrony of adverbial connectors: general tendencies
77(1)
New adverbial connectors in the sub-periods of English: methodology
78(2)
The inventory of Present Day English connectors: donor periods
80(5)
Middle English: a period of experiment
85(3)
Adverbial connectors: morphology
88(18)
The expansion of the English lexicon
88(4)
Major morphological changes
92(2)
Simple adverbs, compounds and derivations
94(2)
Simple adverbs
94(1)
Compounds
94(1)
Derivations: adverbs in -lice, -es and -ways/-wise
95(1)
Pronominal connectors - lexicalized phrases
96(2)
Pronominal connectors
98(4)
Pronominal connectors in Old English
98(2)
Pronominal connectors in the history of English
100(2)
Lexicalized (prepositional) phrases
102(4)
General tendencies
102(1)
Lexicalization
103(1)
Verbal and nominal phrases
104(2)
Cognitive source domains
106(25)
General tendencies
106(2)
Source domain Time
108(2)
Source domain Place/Space
110(4)
Source domain Truth/Fact
114(17)
General tendencies
114(1)
Conversational implicatures: Concession/Contrast
114(2)
Transition
116(1)
OE soplice - ME soothly
117(5)
ME forsooth(e)
122(2)
OE treowlice - ME/EModE/PDE truly
124(3)
PDE indeed and in fact
127(1)
Regularities in change
128(1)
Truth, facts and communicative principles
128(3)
Shifting deictics in the history of English causal connection
131(37)
Earlier research on causals
132(1)
Causal connectors
133(7)
The relation Cause: Cause - Result vs. Result - Cause
133(1)
Present Day English causal connectors: corpus findings
134(1)
Causal connectors: word classes and topology
134(2)
Semantic and pragmatic parameters
136(2)
Information processing
138(2)
OE forpæm, forpon, forpy
140(7)
Forms and functions of forpæm, forpon, forpy
140(3)
Expressions for causal relations in Early and Late West Saxon
143(4)
Discourse deixis
147(5)
Forpæm: morphological make-up and discourse deixis
147(2)
Pronominal connectors in Present Day German
149(2)
Deictic elements in English causal connectors
151(1)
Causal connectors in the history of English
152(14)
Causal connectors in English translations of Boethius' De Consolatione Philosophiae
152(2)
Causal adverbial connectors in the history of English
154(3)
Deixis in new adverbial connectors
157(1)
ME for that
158(3)
``Recursive'' for - Latin nam/enim
161(3)
Subordinators: for as much as, since, because
164(2)
Conclusions
166(2)
Contrast/Concession
168(46)
Cause - Condition - Contrast: affinities
168(1)
Concession - contrast
169(4)
Concession
169(1)
Contrast
169(2)
Concession/Contrast: information structure
171(2)
Subordinators - adverbial connectors: mood distinctions
173(1)
Cross-linguistic patterns in the origin of concessive connectors
173(2)
The diachrony of English contrastive/concessive adverbial connectors
175(9)
General tendencies
175(1)
Antithetic/reformulatory adverbial connectors
175(3)
Contrastive/concessive connectors in English: general tendencies
178(1)
Shifting deictics in English contrastive/concessive connectors
178(3)
Patterns in the origin of English concessive connectors
181(3)
OE peah - PDE though
184(13)
Long-term developments: grammaticalization
184(2)
OE peah
186(4)
Contrastive adverbial connectors from Middle to Present Day English
190(1)
Though
190(1)
Yet and still
191(3)
However
194(3)
Sentence-final connectors in Present Day English
197(3)
Corpus findings
197(1)
Information structure
198(1)
Sentence-final connectors in Present Day German
198(2)
Sentence-final connectors in the history of English
200(1)
Present Day English sentence-final though
200(14)
Earlier research
200(2)
PDG obwohl
202(1)
PDE but
203(4)
Although and though in the LLC
207(1)
Quantitative findings
207(1)
Functions of the subordinator (al)though
208(2)
Functions of sentence-final though
210(4)
Addition
214(13)
General tendencies
214(1)
The diachrony of reinforcing adverbial connectors
214(6)
General tendencies
214(1)
Also
215(4)
New coinages: item, plus, too
219(1)
Iconic principles
219(1)
Equative connectors
220(1)
Summative connectors
221(1)
Appositive connectors
222(1)
Enumerative (listing) connectors
222(2)
Genre-dependency
224(3)
Transition
227(6)
Preliminary considerations
227(1)
Source domain Uncertainty/Doubt: peradventure, perchance, perhaps
228(1)
Interrogatives
229(1)
The diachrony of transitional connectors
230(3)
Paradigm shift: Truth - Fact
230(1)
Regularities in semantic change
231(2)
Perspicuity and the ``New Rhetoric''
233(14)
Collocations vs. medial position of adverbial connectors
233(1)
Sentence-initial collocations
234(1)
Medial positions of adverbial connectors
235(2)
Corpus findings
237(4)
Present Day English
237(1)
Old English to Late Modern English
238(3)
Copia - perspicuitas
241(6)
Perspicuity
241(1)
Punctuation
242(1)
The Scottish Rhetoricians: ``The New Rhetoric''
243(1)
George Campbell's The Philosophy of Rhetoric (1776)
243(4)
Conclusions
247(111)
References
251(25)
Corpora
251(1)
Sources
251(3)
Dictionaries
254(1)
Secondary sources
255(21)
Appendix
Appendix A
276(10)
Adverbial connectors: items
276(6)
Alphabetical index of adverbial connectors
282(4)
Word index
286(5)
Subject and name index
291(4)
Appendix B
295(48)
Listing/additive adverbial connectors
295(12)
Summative adverbial connectors
307(1)
Causal/resultive adverbial connectors
308(9)
Contrastive and concessive adverbial connectors
317(12)
Transitional adverbial connectors - interjections
329(14)
Appendix C
343(15)
Corpus texts
343(10)
Selected corpus texts
353(1)
``Treatises and Homilies''
353(5)
Translation of Boethius' De Consolatione Philosophiae
358
Ursula Lenker, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Germany.