Spreading Patterns: Diffusional Change in the English System of Complementation
Hendrik De Smet (Postdoctoral Fellow in Linguistics, Postdoctoral Fellow in Linguistics, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven)
Spreading Patterns: Diffusional Change in the English System of Complementation
Hendrik De Smet (Postdoctoral Fellow in Linguistics, Postdoctoral Fellow in Linguistics, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven)
Spreading Patterns examines how new constructions emerge and spread through the grammar of a language, in a process called diffusion . This is done by tracking the development of three types of complements from the Middle English period to the present day. These are subject-controlled gerund complements, forELto-infinitives, and subject-controlled participial complements. In the first half of the book, De Smet focuses on how and why patterns diffuse. In the second half, which is largely corpus-based, De Smet tests his theoretical model of diffusion on the three complement types. His work demonstrates how diffusion interacts with the grammatical system of complementation, how diffusion proceeds, step-by-step, and why diffusion is directional.Spreading Patterns will appeal to scholars and advanced students of English, history of English, and historical linguistics.
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