Analysing Older English

An edited volume which addresses problems encountered in gathering and analysing data from early English.

David Denison (Edited by), Ricardo Bermúdez-Otero (Edited by), Chris McCully (Edited by), Emma Moore (Edited by)

9780521112468, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 1 December 2011

350 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 2.1 cm, 0.64 kg

'This volume comprises a wide-ranging collection of papers on historical linguistics. … [it] continues an approach to historical data of which Richard Hogg would have been proud.' Phillip Wallage, Journal of English Language and Linguistics

Is historical linguistics different in principle from other linguistic research? This book addresses problems encountered in gathering and analysing data from early English, including the incomplete nature of the evidence and the dangers of misinterpretation or over-interpretation. Even so, gaps in the data can sometimes be filled. The volume brings together a team of leading English historical linguists who have encountered such issues first-hand, to discuss and suggest solutions to a range of problems in the phonology, syntax, dialectology and onomastics of older English. The topics extend widely over the history of English, chronologically and linguistically, and include Anglo-Saxon naming practices, the phonology of the alliterative line, computational measurement of dialect similarity, dialect levelling and enregisterment in late Modern English, stress-timing in English phonology and the syntax of Old and early Modern English. The book will be of particular interest to researchers and students in English historical linguistics.

General introduction David Denison, Ricardo Bermúdez-Otero, Chris McCully and Emma Moore, with Donka Minkova
Part I. Metrics and Onomastics in Older English: 1. Introduction Chris McCully and David Denison
2. What explanatory metrics has to say about the history of English function words Geoffrey Russom
3. To þære fulan flóde óf þære fulan flode: on becoming a name in Easton and Winchester, Hampshire Richard Coates
4. Notes on some interfaces between place-name material and linguistic theory Peter Kitson
Part II. Writing Practices in Older English: 5. Introduction Chris McCully
6. Anglian features in late West Saxon prose R. D. Fulk
7. 'ea' in early Middle English: from diphthong to digraph Roger Lass and Margaret Laing
Part III. Dialects in Older English: 8. Introduction: on the impossibility of historical sociolinguistics Emma Moore
9. Levelling and enregisterment in northern dialects of late modern English Joan Beal
10. Quantitative historical dialectology April McMahon and Warren Maguire
11. Reconstructing syntactic continuity and change in early modern English regional dialects: the case of who Terttu Nevalainen
Part IV. Sound Change in Older English: 12. Introduction: when a knowledge of history is a dangerous thing Ricardo Bermúdez-Otero
13. Syllable weight and the weak-verb paradigms in Old English Donka Minkova
14. How to weaken one's consonants, strengthen one's vowels, and remain English at the same time Nikolaus Ritt
15. Degemination in English, with special reference to the Middle English period Derek Britton
Part V. Syntax in Older English: 16. Introduction David Denison
17. The status of the postposed 'and-adjective' construction in Old English: attributive or predicative? Olga Fischer
18. DO with weak verbs in early modern English Anthony Warner.

Subject Areas: Grammar, syntax & morphology [CFK], Historical & comparative linguistics [CFF]