Expositiva 25 November
Expositiva 25 November
Expositiva 25 November
ANALOGY
ANALOGY
Analogical levelling
Analogical extension
LEVELLING
complete or partial elimination of
irregularities within a paradigm
reduces allomorphy within the paradigm
word
LEVELLING
complete or partial elimination of
irregularities within a paradigm
reduces allomorphy within the paradigm
word
STEM FORMS STEM FORMS
/kab-/ caber,cabía
, cabrá…
/kep-/ quepo
/kup-/ cupe, cupo
LEVELLING
complete or partial elimination of
irregularities within a paradigm
reduces allomorphy within the paradigm
word
STEM FORMS STEM FORMS
/kab-/ caber,cabía /kab-/
, cabrá…
/kep-/ quepo /kab-/ *cabo
yesterday my
yink ….
a
EXTENSION
Dr Seuss’
a zans animals One zans, two
zanses
One yink, two yinks
a yink
A yink yinks;
yesterday my
yink yinked/yank
a
EXTENSION
Dr Seuss’
a zans animals One zans, two
zanses
One yink, two yinks
a yink
A yink yinks;
yesterday my
yink yinked/yank
Extension of a pattern
Ae outside its original
domain:
• new words
• words which followed
other patterns
ERROR OR INNOVATION?
…every innovation in grammar must at first be
an error; it can become a viable innovation only
when it is used consistently enough by a group
of speakers that it can be regarded as an option
rather tan just a mistake.
Reanalysis is a process
that changes the linguistic
structure without
necessarily changing the
surface manifestation of
that structure.
Reanalysis = rebracketing
la zotea
un arradio
las andalias
[a] [napron] > [an] [apron]
REANALYSIS BASED ON ANALOGY
Reanalysis is a process
that changes the linguistic
structure without
necessarily changing the
surface manifestation of
that structure.
Reanalysis = rebracketing
la zotea
un arradio
las andalias
[a] [napron] > [an]
[apron]
REANALYSIS BASED ON ANALOGY
Reanalysis is a process
that changes the linguistic
structure without
necessarily changing the
surface manifestation of
that structure.
la zotea
un teni
un arradio
las andalias [tenis]
[a] [napron] > [an] [apron] [teni]-[s] → anything ending in –s is a plural
Case
Number
GRAMMATICAL CATEGORIES
ASSOCIATED WITH THE NOUN
Gender A grammatical category which displays such
contrasts as masculine/feminine/neuter or
animate/inanimate. A distinction is drawn between
natural gender, which involves reference to the
Case sex of real-world entities, and grammatical
gender, which is associated with arbitrary word
classes, and signals grammatical relationships
Number between words in a sentence. English has natural
gender. (Crystal 1992: 151)
Case
Some pronouns
show:
3 numbers (+ dual)
5 cases (+
instrumental)
GRAMMATICAL CATEGORIES IN
ENGLIHS
Old English Present-day English
OE ME
Se / þes cyning [masc.] the / this king
Sēo / þēos cwēn [fem.] the / this queen
Þæt / þes scip [neu.] the / this ship
Loss of grammatical gender does not take place
simultaneously in all dialects of ME: Northern (late 10th c.) >
Midlands (13th c.) > South (second half of the 14th c.)
yef he hedde yeue þane [acc.sg.masc.] þridde peny [OE pening masc.] to þe
if he had given the third penny to the
poure...
poor...
(Ayenbyte of Inwyt, Kentish, ca. 1340)
yef he hedde yeue þane [acc.sg.masc.] þridde peny [OE pening masc.] to þe
if he had given the third penny to the
poure...
poor...
(Ayenbyte of Inwyt, Kentish, ca. 1340)
Synthetic marking
OE
hie sendon þa þam gesæligan cyninge [dat. sg. masc.] sumne arwurðne bisceop
[acc.sg.masc.]
‘they sent a certain honourable bishop to the king’
'Mixed' marking
OE
he sende ða to þam cyninge [prep. + dat. sg. masc.] beotlic ærende [acc. sg. neu.]
‘he sent an arrogant message to the king’
Analytic marking
ME
1300: use of a prepositional phrase with a non-inflected noun
Q1. Which of the noun inflections illustrated on pages 12 and 13 of the handout have
survived into PDE?
Q2. Identify the genitive inflection in the different declensions. Which of them is the
source of PDE 's? Which mechanism is at work here?
Q3. Can you spot any differences between OE and PDE in the following phrases
containing the genitive?
OE Ælfredes cyninges sunu
PDE King Alfred's son
SOME QUESTIONS FOR YOU
Q4. What kind of information is provided by the following quote about the nominal
system of English in the 17th century?
singular plural
nom. a man men
gen. of a man of men
dative to a man to men
accusative the man men
vocative o man o men
ablative in, with, from or by a man in, with, from or by men
NUMBER
Nom. Sg. Nom. Pl.
stān stānas
dæd dæde
scip scipu
land land
nama naman
bōc bēc
hæleþ hæleþ
brōðor brōðor
ridend ridend
cild cildru
stones
deeds
NUMBER ships
lands
Nom. Sg. Nom. Pl. names
stān stānas books
dæd dæde brothers
scip scipu
land land sheep
nama naman oxen, child-r-en
bōc bēc geese, men, feet,
hæleþ hæleþ mice
brōðor brōðor
ridend ridend
cild cildru child-r-en
NUMBER
Nom. Sg. Nom. Pl. ME generalization of
stān stānas the –(e)s marker
dæd dæde
scip scipu "The spread of -s may be
considered as an example of
land land
the survival of the fittest in
nama naman language." (Baugh & Cable
1993: 156)
bōc bēc
hæleþ hæleþ Phonetically salient and resistant
Distinctive
brōðor brōðor Frequent
ridend ridend
cild cildru
analogical target
EXTENSION OF -ES
EMid (mid 12th c)
... mid swilce dædes (<OE
Late 10th dæde fem.) ‘with such deeds’
c.
churches /'tʃɜ:tʃɪz/
PDE IRREGULAR PLURALS
plurals
Reinterpretation of plurals not ending in –s as
singulars virus
formula, viruses
formulae, zucchini??
bean-s : bean formulas…
pea-se : X grafitto
pea, analogical bacterium grafitti
singular bacteria
grafitti
bacteria grafittis
bacterias
LEARNED PLURALS VS. ANALOGICAL
PLURALS