1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910828021803321

Autore

Rosemeyer Malte

Titolo

Auxiliary selection in Spanish : gradience, gradualness, and conservation / / Malte Rosemeyer, University of Freiburg

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Amsterdam ; ; Philadelphia : , : John Benjamins Publishing Company, , [2014]

©2014

ISBN

90-272-7040-6

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (333 p.)

Collana

Studies in language companion series (SLCS) ; ; volume 155

Disciplina

465

Soggetti

Spanish language - Variation

Spanish language - Study and teaching

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Auxiliary Selection in Spanish; Editorial page; Title page; LCC data; Dedication page; Epigraph; Table of contents; Conventions; List of tables; List of figures; Acknowledgements; Chapter 1. Introduction; 1.1 Aims and concepts; 1.2 Outline of the study; Chapter 2.Theoretical prerequisites; 2.1 What is auxiliary selection?; 2.2 Auxiliary selection in Spanish; 2.2.1 Auxiliated verbs; 2.2.2 Sentence-level constraints; 2.2.3 A note on reflexive verbs; 2.2.4 Why was ser + PtcP replaced by haber + PtcP?; 2.3 Summary; Chapter 3.A constructional approach to Spanish auxiliary selection

3.1 Resultatives and anteriors 3.1.1 The stativity of resultative constructions; 3.1.2 Persistence of the resultant state at reference time; 3.2 Origins of Spanish auxiliary selection; 3.2.1 Origins of haber + PtcP; 3.2.2 Origins of ser + PtcP; 3.2.3 Differences between habēre + PtcP and esse + PtcP; 3.3 Summary; Chapter 4.A model of linguistic disappearances; 4.1 Gradience and gradualness; 4.2 Actualisation and diffusion; 4.3 Interim summary: Two types of diffusion; 4.4 Why and how do linguistic elements disappear?; 4.5 Remanence and conservation; 4.5.1 Remanence; 4.5.2 Conservation

4.6 Persistence as conservation 4.7 Summary; Chapter 5.Methodology and corpus; 5.1 Quantitative data in historical linguistics; 5.1.1 Usage frequencies and discourse traditions; 5.1.2 Usage frequencies and



copying; 5.1.3 Dating the texts; 5.2 Data selection; 5.2.1 A corpus of historiographical texts; 5.2.2 Determining the envelope of variation; 5.2.2.1 The multivalency of ser + PtcP and haber + PtcP; 5.2.2.2 Verbs displaying variable behaviour; 5.2.3 Queries; 5.2.4 Randomisation; 5.2.5 Quantitative survey of the data; 5.3 Statistical methods; 5.4 Summary

Chapter 6.Auxiliary selection in Old Spanish 6.1 Periodisation; 6.2 Measurements; 6.2.1 Date of occurrence; 6.2.2 Auxiliated verbs; 6.2.3 Reflexivity; 6.2.4 Subject referentiality; 6.2.5 Locative, manner, intention expressions; 6.2.6 Temporal adverbial modification and number marking; 6.2.7 Modality; 6.2.8 Temporal-aspectual morphology; 6.2.9 Persistence; 6.3 Descriptive quantitative analysis; 6.4 Multivariate analysis; 6.4.1 Measurements; 6.4.2 Model selection; 6.4.3 Results; 6.4.4 Discussion; 6.4.4.1 Verb semantics and subject referentiality; 6.4.4.2 Reflexivity

6.4.4.3 Adverbials expressing manner, location, or intention 6.4.4.4 Temporal adverbial modification, number morphology, modality; 6.4.4.5 Temporal morphology; 6.4.4.6 Persistence; 6.5 Summary; 6.5.1 Transitivity; 6.5.2 Reference to event vs. reference to resultant state; 6.5.3 Persistence of resultant state; 6.5.4 Discourse function; 6.5.5 General summary; Chapter 7.Gradualness and conservation in the loss of ser + PtcP; 7.1 Methodological approach; 7.2 Remanence; 7.2.1 Descriptive analysis; 7.2.2 Multivariate analysis; 7.2.2.1 Measurements; 7.2.2.2 Model selection; 7.2.2.3 Results

7.2.2.4 Discussion

Sommario/riassunto

Although usage-based linguistics emphasises the need for studies of language change to take frequency effects into account, there is a lack of research that tries to systematically model frequency effects and their relation to diffusion processes in language change. This monograph offers a diachronic study of the change in Spanish perfect auxiliary selection between Old and Early Modern Spanish that led to the gradual replacement of the auxiliary ser 'be' with the auxiliary haber 'have'. It analyses this process in terms of the interaction between gradience, gradualness,