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Spreading Change: Diffusional Change in the English System of
Complementation examines the emergence and spread of three types of
complements from the Middle English period to the present day. The
three types of complements are subject-controlled gerund
complements (1), for...to-infinitives (2), and subject-controlled
participial compelements (3). (1) The cat loves being stroked,
absolutely loves it! (2) We couldn't afford for it to go wrong. (3)
The receptionist is busy filling a fifth box. In the first half of
the book De Smet addresses the theoretical issues by summarizing a
number of major approaches to the study of complementation, and by
focusing on how and why a particular change spreads (a process that
he calls "diffusion"). In the second half, which is descriptive and
largely corpus-based, De Smet tests these mechanisms on the three
complement types. His work demonstrates: a) how diffusion interacts
with the grammatical system of complementation; b) how diffusion
proceeds, step-by-step; and c) why diffusion is directional.
In its 1500-year history, the English language has seen dramatic
grammatical changes. This book offers a comprehensive and
reader-friendly account of the major developments, including
changes in word order, the noun phrase and verb phrase, changing
relations between clausal constituents and the development of new
subordinate constructions. The book puts forward possible
explanations for change, drawing on the existing and most recent
literature, and with reference to the major theoretical models. The
authors use corpus evidence to investigate language-internal and
language-external motivations for change, including the impact of
language contact. The book is intended for students who have been
introduced to the history of English and want to deepen their
understanding of major grammatical changes, and for linguists in
general with a historical interest. It will also be of value to
literary scholars professionally engaged with older texts.
In its 1500-year history, the English language has seen dramatic
grammatical changes. This book offers a comprehensive and
reader-friendly account of the major developments, including
changes in word order, the noun phrase and verb phrase, changing
relations between clausal constituents and the development of new
subordinate constructions. The book puts forward possible
explanations for change, drawing on the existing and most recent
literature, and with reference to the major theoretical models. The
authors use corpus evidence to investigate language-internal and
language-external motivations for change, including the impact of
language contact. The book is intended for students who have been
introduced to the history of English and want to deepen their
understanding of major grammatical changes, and for linguists in
general with a historical interest. It will also be of value to
literary scholars professionally engaged with older texts.
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