Abstract
Abstract
European Portuguese is known for the complexity of its second-person pronouns system. Despite this fact, there are
not many works that deal with its evolution, since most analyses focus on case studies. In this article, I aim to pinpoint the
diachrony of the second-person pronominal system of European Portuguese through the analysis of a corpus consisting of letters
that cover the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The data will be compared to the available information regarding the previous
centuries as well as the present. The results show that the European variety has journeyed through three very specific periods in
its history, triggering both loss of inflection and person disagreements. Moreover, it has always maintained the spectrum of
distance or power as the unmarked form of politeness – in contrast to the fashions attested in other languages and elsewhere in
Europe.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
1 articles.
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