... Scolar Press,
19 73.
34 . Peacham 15 93: 1 23.
35 . As (33 ).
36 a. Bartholomew Fair, II.ii .30 –1. Acted 1614, printed 1 631 . Text as in (19a), VI 42.
Sylvia Adamson
644
6. The first sentence of De duplici ... Tea.
(Pope 1714)
Sylvia Adamson
632
36 b. The Alchemist, I.iii .102 3. Acted 1 610, printed 1612. Text as in (19a),
V 31 2.
36 c. The Alchemist, II.ii.80–1. As (36 b)...
... deeper into the latest science of the modern middle- aged brain, I found not bad
news but good.
As it turns out, the brain in middle age has another story to tell that’s quite the opposite of the one
I’d ... describe these
stressors, they often talk in terms of meeting the challenge.” Summing up, Harvard’s Ronald Kessler,
a director of the middle- aged survey...
... Chase 19 81 and especially the essay by
Stanley 19 81 therein), the composition of Beowulf may be attributable to
the latter part of the eighth century, when the Mercian kingdom,
especially under Offa, ... (Mouton, 19 70),
p. 17 7 2 31
6 .1 Map
of
areas
of
rhotacism
412
6.2 New York City
(r) by
class and style (after Labov 19 66)
414
6.3 Map
of
early A...
... > PDE
sat.
Although the situation is
obscure (for discussion of
the
short vowel see Lass 19 76 :13 2 4), in part
at least because of the conservatism of the late Old English spelling
system, ... aspect
of the diphthongal system is uncertain and subject to fierce debate and
the most controversial of these are discussed in Đ3.3.3 in the context of
the deve...
... observable in Old English, and the
development of the present-day system is something which began at
the very earliest stage of the emergence of English as a separate
language.
3. 4 .1. 2 Adjectives
Adjectives ... also for the later history of the language. In terms of Old English,
the new phonemes
/J,tf,d3/
were introduced, as well as [9] as an
allophone o...
... that it is part of the system of English, but also
that
**She has arrivedyesterday
is not (** signals that the pattern is not part
of
the
structure of the language, or at least of
the
variety ... might-be
(Or 2
6.88 . 14 )
in their fear of the time they might be sunk in the earth (due to an
earthquake).
4. 3.2.3 Pre-modals
The set of pre-modals inclu...
... represents the exact words of the reported
proposition, and when the subjects of the main clause and of the
complement are the same. It is only occasionally absent if the
complement represents the words ... boundaries there where Caucasus
se beorg is be norpan
that mountain is in the- north
(Orl
1. 10 . 15 )
Those are India's boundaries in the north of which...
... traditional studies of word order are Andrew (19 34), Fries
(19 40),
Bacquet (19 62 ), Shannon (19 64 ), Reszkiewicz (19 66 ), Pillsbury
(19 67 ),
Brown (19 70), Carlton (19 70) and Gardner (19 71) . More recent
studies ... Only the meaning of a lexical item of the donor language is
transferred to the receptor language, when either: (a) the meaning of
some lexical i...
... distinguish from
synthetic agent nouns
of
the type
landbuend
(cf. Đ5.4.2.2 .1) ,
and
often
we
find nominal
and
adjectival doublets
(cf.
Karre
19 15 :77 ff.,
Carr
19 39: 21
Iff.).
The
determinant ... Carr 19 39:309ff.) but it would seem
unjustified to deny the existence of genitive compounds (see Nickel eta/.,
19 76 :11 ,
20) in view of the behaviour of word...
... varieties of Old English - Late West Saxon (Brunner
19 55,
Chatman 19 58, Hockett 19 59, Wagner 19 69), Mercian (Kuhn
19 39,
Dresher 19 78, 19 80 ), and general (Kuhn 19 61, 19 70). Except for
Kuhn, these ... to be
found in Old English texts.
From this rich foundation of data, such scholars as Luick (19 14-40),
Sievers ( 18 98) and Sweet ( 18 88 )
—
the first great sy...
... correlative in the main clause:
(20 6) Thanne rekke I noght, whan I have lost my
lyf,
(CT
1 .22 57
[1: 22 59 ])
28 6
Olga Fischer
the perfect in Old English may also be partly a matter of the style ... as (21 5) , where the subject pronoun of
casten
has been
left
out in
spite
of
the fact that there
is no
syntactic antecedent.
The
context, of course, ma...
... 308 -21 .
Hiltunen, R. A. (1983a). The Decline of the Prefixes and the Beginnings of the
English Phrasal Verb: the Evidence from some Old and Early Middle
English Texts. DPhil. thesis. University of ... Munksgaard.
(1935).
The
Philosophy
of
Grammar.
London: Allen & Unwin.
(19 62) .
The
Growth and Structure
of
the English
Language.
9th edn. Oxford:
B...
... studies. There is a
vast
literature
on these matters, both professional and amateur.
The interest of the authors of even the more serious of these is
rarely
directed towards the names themselves, ... Haugland
(1991:
341 - 54 ) .
3.2.6-7
T^iere is brief discussion
of
the rise
of
the
attributive
noun and
of
pre-
modification
generally
in Sorensen
(1980)....