Introduction to Early Modern EnglishCambridge University Press, 1991 M07 26 - 456 pages The period between 1500 and 1700 was the most decisive one in the formation of standard modern English, yet no really comprehensive account of Early Modern English has been available. Manfred Görlach's Introduction to Early Modern English fills a very real need. It provides a thorough and linguistically informed synchronic description of Early Modern English, dealing with its varieties, with writing and orthography, phonetics and phonology, syntax and the lexicon, including sections on problems of language contact and the lexicographical tradition. In addition, it provides a valuable anthology of texts from a wide range of sources: the texts exemplify features from Early Modern English discussed in the main body of the book, and have also been effectively chosen so as to provide something of the cultural background to the processes of linguistic changes of the period. |
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
12 Model of grammar | 2 |
14 Cultural background | 5 |
Varieties of Early Modern English | 8 |
22 Dating Early Modern English | 9 |
23 Written and spoken language | 11 |
24 Dialects of Early Modern English | 13 |
25 Scots | 18 |
53 Adjectives | 83 |
54 Articles and pronouns | 84 |
55 Verb inflexion for person | 87 |
56 Tense formation | 90 |
Study questions | 93 |
Syntax | 95 |
62 The noun phrase | 102 |
63 The verb phrase | 104 |
26 Sociolectal variation | 23 |
27 Diachrony | 25 |
28 Registers | 27 |
29 The status of English | 36 |
Study questions | 41 |
Writing and Spelling | 42 |
33 Graphemes and allographs | 43 |
34 The historical foundations and EModE developments | 45 |
35 Spelling reform | 50 |
36 Punctuation | 58 |
37 The Scottish system | 59 |
Study questions | 60 |
Phonology | 61 |
42 The phonological system of EModE | 64 |
43 Types of phonological change | 66 |
vowels | 70 |
45 Unstressed vowels | 73 |
46 Consonants | 74 |
47 Transcriptions of specimen passages | 76 |
48 Spelling pronunciation | 77 |
Study questions | 78 |
Inflexional morphology | 79 |
52 Case | 80 |
64 Case wordorder and prepositions | 107 |
65 Tense mood and aspect | 110 |
66 Functions of do | 117 |
67 Concord | 121 |
69 Text syntax and rhetoric | 130 |
Study questions | 134 |
Vocabulary | 136 |
72 The tradition of the dictionaries | 149 |
73 The problem of loanwords | 154 |
74 Loans from living languages | 166 |
75 Wordformation | 170 |
76 Meaning | 181 |
77 Change of meaning | 198 |
Study questions | 208 |
Texts | 212 |
T1T66 | 215 |
406 | |
409 | |
429 | |
444 | |
448 | |
455 | |
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Common terms and phrases
adjectives Aeneid Ben Jonson borrowed calquing Cambridge cause Chaucer clauses common dialect dictionaries distinction doth Early Modern English EModE EModE period England English language euen euery expressions fifteenth forms French frequent function grammar grammarians graphemes hath haue inflexion late Latin Latyne learned letters lexemes lexical linguistic loanwords London Lord loue Makbeth maner maye meaning modern morphemes naturall neuer nouns ouer participle phoneme poets polysemy prepositions printed pronouns pronunciation prose quhilk relative clauses rhetoric Scots Scottish selfe semantic semantic change sememes sentence serue seventeenth century Shakespeare shew sixteenth century sociolect speech spelling style stylistic synonymy syntactic syntax tense texts thair thee theyr thing thou thynges tion tonge tongue translation tung tyme types University Press verbs vnderstand vnto vocabulary vowel length vowels vpon vsed vulgar words writing written şat
References to this book
A History of Roget's Thesaurus: Origins, Development, and Design Werner Hüllen No preview available - 2005 |