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LIN 201

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Accusative = Object: Harry saw John. Old English -- Inflectional ... Later change (change in the mental grammars of later generations): Gradual loss ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: LIN 201


1
LIN 201
  • Fall 2007
  • Lecture XXVI (26)
  • Language change II

2
Reminders
  • 1. Final Exam Thurs., 12/13, 245-445 PM,
    Stolkin Aud.
  • 2. Review Sheet Available today.
  • 3. Review Session Tues., 12/11, 1045 AM to1215
    PM, RTBA.

3
Announcement
  • Requests to take the Final Exam at some time
    other than the scheduled time must meet the
    conditions for getting credit for a missed
    Recitation illness, serious family problems
    (death in the family, etc.), etc.

4
A note on the multintional character of Canada
  • (French) Quebec lies inside (English-majority)
    Canada. There is another minority nation inside
    Quebec -- the Cree nation of Native Americans.
    The attitudes of the Quebecois toward the Cree is
    similar to the attitudes of English-speaking
    Canadians toward Quebec -- the majority (in the
    case of Quebec, the French speakers) should say
    what policies are adopted by the state.

5
Agenda
  • 1. Videotape. The Mother Tongue. (concl.)
  • 2. Change in mental grammars.
  • 3. Interactions.
  • 4. Why languages change.

6
Agenda
  • 1. Tape The Mother Tongue Questions Course
    Reader, pp. 155-157.

7
Agenda
  • 2. Changes in the mental grammars of speakers of
    a language.

8
Phonological change (1)
  • Previous cases --
  • 1. r-lessness Addition of a phonological rule
    to the mental grammars of speakers.
  • 2. hoose gt house Change in the pronunciation of
    a set of lexical items.
  • 3. pie gt pa

9
Phonological change (2)
  • Loss of unstressed syllables. stone (FR, p.
    468)
  • Old English Middle English.
  • stane ston
  • stana ston
  • stanum ston

10
Morphological change
  • Analogy (past tense forms)
  • Middle Eng Modern Eng
  • clumb climbed
  • holp helped
  • weeshe washed
  • shope shaped
  • shove shaved

11
Syntactic change
  • Old English is an Inflectional language Modern
    English is a Word Order language.

12
Inflectional language (1)
  • THE KING MEETS THE BISHOP
  • se cyning meteth thone biscop.
  • thone biscop meteth se cyning.
  • THE BISHOP MEETS THE KING
  • se biscop meteth thone cyning.
  • thone cyning meteth se biscop.

13
Word order language (1)
  • Example (Modern English)
  • The bishop saw the king. and The king saw the
    bishop. have different meanings.

14
Agenda
  • 3. Interaction among phonological, morphological,
    and syntactic change.

15
Syntactic change
  • How did Old English (an Inflectional language)
    change to Modern English (a Word Order language)?

16
Case endings (FR, pp. 467-8)
  • Nominative Subject of the sentence John left.
  • Genitive Possessor Johns book.
  • Dative Receiver Mary sent a letter to John.
  • Accusative Object Harry saw John.

17
Old English -- Inflectional
  • Nouns (FR, p. 468 stone)
    Case Form
  • Nom se stan the stone
  • Gen thaes stanes of the stone
  • Dat thaem stane to the stone
  • Acc thone stan the stone

18
A phonological change (1)
  • Loss of unstressed syllables and endings. stone
    (FR, p. 468)
  • Old English Middle English.
  • thaem stane gt the ston
  • thara stana gt the ston
  • thaem stanum gt the ston

19
A phonological change (2)
  • Loss of unstressed syllables (cont.) --
  • Initial change Addition of a phonological rule
    deleting unstressed syllables.

20
Morphological results (1)
  • Loss of case endings and analogy (the stone)
  • Old English Middle English
  • se stan gt the ston
  • thaes stanes gt the stones
  • thaem stane gt the ston
  • thone stan gt the ston

21
Morphological change
  • Loss of case endings --
  • Later change (change in the mental grammars of
    later generations) Gradual loss of the
    morphological (inflectional) rules that determine
    the case endings for Nouns.

22
Syntactic results
  • Since case endings were no longer present to
    indicate whether a Noun was a Subject or an
    Object or a Receiver, the only way to indicate
    this was by Word Order and/or by Prepositions.

23
  • 1. Phonological change occurred to eliminate
    unstressed syllables resulting in
  • 2. loss of morphological distinctions among Noun
    cases which led to
  • 3. syntactic change from Inflectional to Word
    Order.

24
Agenda
  • 4. Why languages change.

25
FR, pp. 494-496 (1)
  • 1. Child language acquisition.
  • Ex clumb gt climbed.
  • 2. Societal change.
  • Ex television.
  • 3. Ease of articulation.
  • Ex Loss of unstressed syllables.

26
FR, pp. 494-496 (2)
  • 4. Analogy
  • Ex clumb gt climbed. (Overgeneralization)
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