Affiliation:
1. The University of Manchester
2. Leiden University Centre for Linguistics
3. KU Leuven
Abstract
Abstract
The present study is an in-depth, corpus-based analysis of the rise and institutionalization of the indefinite
nominal gerund in Late Modern English, considering the observed developments in light of their interactions with functionally
related constructions. Based on historical data taken from the Corpus of Late Modern English Texts (version 3.1), we argue that
the rise of indefinite nominal gerunds constitutes an instance of diachronic nominalization, in which the nominal gerund
over time gradually comes to exploit a fuller range of paradigmatic properties associated with the nominal class. At the same
time, this study investigates the potential influence of isomorphism on the observed developments. While the results do
support the frequently investigated claim that language systems have a (weak) preference for a one-form-one-meaning organization
in later stages of their development, the initial emergence of indefinite nominal gerunds can more accurately be explained by
allowing system pressure as an enabling force of linguistic innovation. The picture presented in this study serves as
evidence that the long-term development of linguistic constructions can be the result of competing – even maximally
opposite – forces.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
5 articles.
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