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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Julia SchlüterPublisher: De Gruyter Imprint: De Gruyter Mouton Volume: 46 Dimensions: Width: 15.50cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 23.00cm Weight: 0.820kg ISBN: 9783110186079ISBN 10: 3110186071 Pages: 404 Publication Date: 19 September 2005 Recommended Age: College Graduate Student Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsChapter 1 Introduction 1.1. The state of the art 1.2. Aims and scope 1.3. The structure of the argument Chapter 2 The Principle of Rhythmic Alternation introduced 2.1. Outline 2.1.1. The universality of rhythmic organization 2.1.2. Isochrony types: stress timing vs. syllable timing 2.1.3. Compensation strategies 2.1.4. Functional explanations for rhythmic alternation 2.2. Previous research on rhythmic influences on English grammar Chapter 3 Methodology 3.1. Corpora and their limitations 3.2. The phonology of written language 3.3. Concordance software and search procedures 3.4. Tests of statistical significance Chapter 4 Analysis of attributive structures 4.1. Introduction 4.2. Worse vs. worser from EModE to nineteenth-century English 4.3. A-adjectives in PDE 4.4. Mono- and disyllabic variants of past participles 4.4.1. Drunk vs. drunken from ME to PDE 4.4.2. Broke vs. broken from ME to PDE 4.4.3. Struck vs. stricken from ME to PDE 4.4.4. Knit vs. knitted from ME to PDE 4.4.5. Lit vs. lighted from ME to PDE 4.4.6. Summary 4.5. A quite vs. quite a from EModE to PDE 4.6. The order of coordinated colour adjectives in PDE 4.7. Negated attributive adjectives in PDE 4.8. Summary Chapter 5 Analysis of verbal and adverbial structures 5.1. Introduction 5.2. Negated sentence adverbs in PDE 5.3. Suffixed and suffixless adverbs 5.3.1. Quick vs. quickly from EModE to PDE 5.3.2. Slow vs. slowly from EModE to PDE 5.3.3. Scarce vs. scarcely in PDE 5.4. Marked and unmarked infinitives 5.4.1. Infinitives dependent on active make in EmodE and LModE 5.4.2. Infinitives dependent on passive make from EmodE to nineteenth-century English 5.4.3. Infinitives dependent on passive bid in nineteenth-century English 5.4.4. Infinitives dependent on the marginal modal dare from EModE to PDE 5.5. A-prefixation of -ing-forms 5.5.1. A-prefixation of -ing-forms following set from EModE to PDE 5.5.2. A-prefixation of -ing-forms following go from EModE to PDE 5.6. Summary Chapter 6 Theoretical implications 6.1. Introduction 6.2. Optimality Theory 6.2.1. Universal, violable and ranked constraints 6.2.2. A critique of Optimality Theory 6.2.3. OT approaches to language variation and change 6.3. Spreading activation models 6.3.1. Principles of neural action 6.3.2. Networks in production and perception 6.3.3. Implications of the alternation of activation and recovery 6.3.4. Interactivity between levels 6.3.5. Limits to interactivity 6.3.6. Language variation and change in a neuro- and psycholinguistic perspective 6.3.7. Limitations of interactive activation models Chapter 7 Conclusion 7.1. Synopsis 7.2. OutlookReviewsAuthor InformationJulia Schlüter is Post-doctoral Research Fellow at the Universität Paderborn, Germany. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |