Abstract
Abstract
This study examines the affirmatives yes, yea and ay in Early Modern English,
more specifically in the period 1560 to 1760. Affirmatives have an obvious role as responses to yes/no questions in dialogues, and
so this study demanded the kind of dialogical material provided by the Corpus of English Dialogues 1560–1760. I
examine the meanings and contexts of usage of each affirmative: their distribution across time and text-types, their collocates
and their occurrence after positive and negative questions. The results challenge a number of issues and claims in the literature,
including when the “Germanic pattern” (involving yes and yea after positive or negative
questions) dissolved, whether yea or ay were dialectal, and the timing of the rise of
ay and the fall of yea.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Reference22 articles.
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2. CQPweb . Created by Andrew Hardie ( Lancaster University ). See : https://cqpweb.lancs.ac.uk/ .
3. Early English Books Online: Text Creation Partnership (EEBO-TCP) . Phase II release, accessed via CQPweb .
4. OED (Oxford English Dictionary) Online . June 2017 . Oxford University Press . See : http://www.OED.com
5. Questions and Answers in the English Courtroom (1640–1760)
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