Abstract
ABSTRACTThis paper analyses aspects of the loss of verb-second (V2) in Old French in a historical sociolinguistic perspective. Data come from sequences in which a main declarative is preceded immediately by a tensed subordinate clause (Vance, Donaldson, and Steiner, 2010). Following Romaine (1982), represented speech and narrative are considered to represent distinct registers within a single text. An analysis of intra-textual variation between narrative and represented speech reveals stylistic variation, in that represented speech evinces higher rates of surface subject-verb-(object) orders in main clauses than narrative passages within the same text. The data also reveal gender variation, as the represented speech of women tends to be more linguistically conservative than that of men.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Reference94 articles.
1. Linguistic change, social network and speaker innovation
2. Socio-historical linguistics and the history of French
3. Vance B. (1981). A syntactic and semantic study of subject personal pronoun usage in Old French. M.A. thesis, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY.
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4 articles.
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