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Morphological Change Up Close

Two and a Half Centuries of Verbal Inflection in Nuremberg
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Ranking79187inSprachen
CHF141.85

Description


Using a data base of more than 86,000 verb tokens taken from a collection of autograph texts written by fifty-one different natives of Nuremberg between 1356 and 1619, this book explores some of the many changes in verbal inflection that took place during the Early New High German period and the implications of these changes for a number of important issues in morphological and diachronic theory. Nearly all instances of change or variation in verbal inflection observable in the texts are described. Changes discussed at greater length include: the leveling of certain stem-vowel alternations among the strong, weak, and preterite-present verbs; the leveling of the consonant alternations attributed to Verner's Law; regularizations of originally strong and preterite-present verbs and irregularizations of originally weak verbs; shifts in the lexical distribution of the past-participle prefix ge-; and changes in many forms of the verb sein. The nature and size of the data base, the number and diversity of writers included, and innovative methods of data collection and analysis make possible a description of these changes that is in many cases more detailed than any previously available account. This empirical work provides a foundation for the discussion of a number of theoretical questions, including: the role of factors such as iconicity, system congruity and type and token frequency in morphological change; the directionality of analogical leveling; the adequacy of connectionist and related models of morphological processing; the nature of morphological haplology; and the relationship between sociolinguistic variation and diachronic change.
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Additional ISBN/GTIN9783110929904
Product TypeE-book
BindingE-book
FormatPDF
Format noteDRM Adobe
PublisherDe Gruyter
Publishing date04/12/2017
Edition17001 A. Reprint 2017
Series no.422
Pages188 pages
LanguageEnglish
File size14016 Kbytes
Article no.4168523
CatalogsVC
Data source no.1519518
Product groupSprachen
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