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E-raamat: English Historical Linguistics: Historical English in contact. Papers from the XXth ICEHL

Edited by (University of Edinburgh), Edited by (University of Edinburgh), Edited by (University of Edinburgh), Edited by (University of Edinburgh), Edited by (University of Edinburgh)
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"This volume drawn from the 20th International Conference on English Historical Linguistics (ICEHL, Edinburgh 2018) focuses on the role of language contact in the history of English. It showcases a wide variety of historical linguistic approaches, including 'big data' analyses of large corpora, dialectological methods, and the study of translated texts. It also breaks new ground by applying relevant insights from other fields, among them postcolonial linguistics and anthropology. This pluralistic approach brings new and under-studied issues within the scope of explanation, and challenges some long-held assumptions about the nature of historical change in English. The volume will be of interest to an audience interested in the history of English, and the impact of its contact with Viking Age Norse, Old French, and Latin"--

This volume drawn from the 20th International Conference on English Historical Linguistics (ICEHL, Edinburgh 2018) focuses on the role of language contact in the history of English. It showcases a wide variety of historical linguistic approaches, including ‘big data’ analyses of large corpora, dialectological methods, and the study of translated texts. It also breaks new ground by applying relevant insights from other fields, among them postcolonial linguistics and anthropology. This pluralistic approach brings new and under-studied issues within the scope of explanation, and challenges some long-held assumptions about the nature of historical change in English. The volume will be of interest to an audience interested in the history of English, and the impact of its contact with Viking Age Norse, Old French, and Latin.

Arvustused

Overall, the volume offers new insights into HEL in contact situations through a balanced account that considers both traditional philological analysis and the big data approach. The volume further provides new and nuanced understandings of several areas which are generally less known or less often researched, for example, Cornish English, Old Northumbrian and Older Scots, lexical replacement and diachronic speech acts. Innovative methods may also open new avenues of research into the history and development of English -- Sabina Nedelius, University of Gothenburg, in English Language and Linguistics (2023)

Chapter 1 Introduction
1(4)
Chris Cummins
Chapter 2 Adapting the Dynamic Model to historical linguistics: Case studies on the Middle English and Anglo-Norman contact situation
5(30)
Michael Percillier
Chapter 3 An account of the use of fronting and clefting in Cornish English
35(22)
Avelino Corral Esteban
Chapter 4 How does causal connection originate? Evidence from translation correspondences between the Old English Boethius and the Consolatio
57(18)
Anastasia Eseleva
Chapter 5 Old Northumbrian in the Scottish Borders: Evidence from place-names
75(22)
Carole Hough
Chapter 6 From eadig to happy: The lexical replacement in the field of Medieval English adjectives of fortune
97(22)
Rafal Molencki
Chapter 7 Distributional changes in synonym sets: The case offragrant, scented, and perfumed in 19th- and 20th-century American English
119(24)
Daniela Pettersson-Traba
Chapter 8 The taking off and catching on of etymological spellings in Early Modern English: Evidence from the EEBO Corpus
143(22)
Ryuichi Hotta
Yoko Iyeiri
Chapter 9 Speech acts in the history of English: Gaps and paths of evolution
165(16)
Thomas Kohnen
Index 181