First published in 2003, this is a study of the syntactic behaviour
of personal pronoun subjects and the indefinite pronoun man in Old
English. It focuses on differences in word order as compared to
full noun phrases. In generative work on Old English, noun phrases
are usually divided into two categories: 'nominal' and
'pronominal'. The latter category has typically been restricted to
personal pronouns, but despite striking similarities to the
behaviour of nominals there were good reasons to believe that man
should be grouped with personal pronouns. This book explores the
investigation carried out with the aid of the Toronto Corpus, which
confirmed this hypothesis.
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