1st Edition

Composite Predicates in Late Modern English

By Ljubica Leone Copyright 2024
94 Pages 4 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

94 Pages 4 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

94 Pages 4 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This volume provides a concise overview of the diachronic development of composite predicates (CPs) in Late Modern English, offering clearer evidence of ongoing language change using data less readily available in other corpora. While previous scholarship on CPs exists from a synchronic perspective, this book is the first to focus exclusively on Late Modern English with a diachronic... Read more

List of figures

List of tables

Acknowledgments

List of abbreviations and conventions

Chapter 1. Composite predicates in 17501850

1.1. Background

1.2. Linguistic overview of composite predicates

1.3. Previous studies and research aims

1.4. The corpus: the Late Modern English-Old Bailey Corpus

1.4.1. Corpus compilation: source data, sampling, text types

1.4.2. Corpus architecture and size

1.5. Method: selectional criteria, corpus-based techniques, and statistical tests

1.6. The structure of the book

Chapter 2. History

2.1. Old English and Middle English: the establishment of composite predicates

2.2. Early Modern English: the spread of composite predicates

2.3. Late Modern English: stability and change

2.4. Present Day English: current forms and uses 

Chapter 3. Linguistic Features

3.1. Distribution of composite predicates

3.2. The base verbs

3.3. Phrasal profile and productivity of composite predicates

3.3.1. Phraseological variation across the years 1750–1850

3.3.2. The use of deverbal nouns with more than one verb

3.3.3. Productivity 

Chapter 4. Composite Predicates Between Stability and Change

4.1. Stable composite predicates

4.2. Morpho-syntactic features of composite predicate

4.2.1. Syntactic patterns

4.2.2. Articles and determiners

4.2.3. Internal modification

4.2.4. The use of plural forms

4.2.5. Passivization

4.3. Semantic features

Chapter 5. Processes of change

5.1. Grammaticalization and lexicalization

5.2. Phraseological variation and layering between alternative prepositions

5.3. The coinage of new composite predicates

5.4. Semantic change

Chapter 6. Conclusion

Appendix: list of composite predicates

References

Index

 

 

 

 

 

 

Biography

Ljubica Leone is currently a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Milan, Italy. She received her PhD in Literary and Linguistic Studies from the University of Salerno, Italy.