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Mitchell 5.8.2 127.0.0.1
Mitchell 5.8.2 127.0.0.1












Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Hristov, Bozhil, 1984- author. Grammaticalising the Perfect and Explanations of Language Change Have- and Be-Perfects in the History and Structure of English and Bulgarian

#Mitchell 5.8.2 127.0.0.1 series#

The titles published in this series are listed at /bshl Joseph (The Ohio State University) – Ritsuko Kikusawa (National Museum of Ethnology) – Silvia Luraghi (Università di Pavia) Joseph Salmons (University of Wisconsin) – Søren Wichmann (MPI/EVA) Grammaticalising the Perfect and Explanations of Language Changeīrill’s Studies in Historical Linguistics Series Editor Jóhanna Barðdal (Ghent University) Consulting Editor Spike Gildea (University of Oregon) Editorial Board Joan Bybee (University of New Mexico) – Lyle Campbell (University of Hawai’i Manoa) – Nicholas Evans (The Australian National University) Bjarke Frellesvig (University of Oxford) – Mirjam Fried (Czech Academy of Sciences) – Russel Gray (University of Auckland) – Tom Güldemann (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin) – Alice Harris (University of Massachusetts) Brian D. 2.1 Evolutionary and Functionalist Models of Language ChangeĢ.1.2 The Concepts of Function and Functional Load, the Invisible Hand and TeleologyĢ.2.2 Reanalysis in the Context of GrammaticalisationĢ.2.3 The Role of Frequency and Contact in GrammaticalisationĬhapter 3 The Story of the English Perfectģ.1.1 Terminological and Etymological Preliminariesģ.1.2 The Have-Perfect in Old English: Morphological Marking, Ambiguity, and Reanalysisģ.1.4 Increased Use and Greater Degree of Grammaticalisation of the Have-Perfect in Middle and Modern Englishģ.2 The Origin and Status of the Be-Perfectģ.3 Competition between the Be- and the Have-Perfectģ.4 Traditional Accounts for the Decline of the Be-Perfectģ.4.3 Functional Load and the Disappearance of OE weorðanģ.4.4 Ambiguity in the Contexts of Coordination and Contractionģ.5.2 Proliferation of the Functions of Haveģ.5.3 Development of Alternative Passives and PerfectsĬhapter 4 The Development of the Perfect in a Selection of Old English TextsĤ.2 Issues in Corpus Work and CompilationĤ.4 The Perfect in the Anglo-Saxon ChroniclesĤ.4.2.4 Manuscript A: Late Ninth and Early Tenth CenturiesĤ.4.2.5 Manuscript E (Peterborough Chronicle): Late Tenth and Early Eleventh CenturiesĬhapter 5 Further Development of the Perfect Based on a Selection of Texts – from Middle into Modern Englishĥ.3 The Fifteenth Century: The Second Shepherds’ Play (Secunda Pastorum)ĥ.5 The Seventeenth Century: Restoration Comedyĥ.6 Late Middle English Correspondence: the Paston Lettersĥ.7 Seventeenth-Century Correspondence: Samuel PepysĬhapter 6 How Things Could Have Been: a Glance at GermanĦ.2 Analysis and Discussion of Eighteenth-Century German DramaĬhapter 7 The Perfect in the History and Structure of Bulgarianħ.1 Overview of the Bulgarian Temporal and Aspectual Systemħ.3 Have as an Auxiliary in the History of Bulgarianħ.4.4 Functional Load as an Explanation for the Rise of the Have-Perfect in Bulgarianħ.4.6 Agreement and Grammaticalisation Revisitedħ.4.7 Mixing of Active and Passive Participles and Language Contact as Explanations for the Have-Perfect in Bulgarian and MacedonianĬhapter 8 The Development of the Perfect in a Selection of Middle and Modern Bulgarian TextsĨ.5 Epilogue: the Have-Perfect in Modern Bulgarian












Mitchell 5.8.2 127.0.0.1