Locative Inversion in Old English Embedded Clauses
Abstract
:1. Introduction
(1) | Æfter | his | deaðe | foran | eft | Cartainienses | an | Sicilie | mid | scipum |
after | his | death | went | again | Carthaginians | to | Sicily | with | ships | |
‘after his death went again the Carthaginians to Sicily with ships’ | ||||||||||
(coorosiu, Or_4:5.91.29.1854) | ||||||||||
(From Dreschler 2015, p. 247, her 113) |
(2) | swa swa | hit | healdað | Grecas | ||||||
as | it | keep | Greeks | |||||||
‘as the Greeks keep it’ | ||||||||||
(æLS[Basil]:142.546) (López-Martínez 2019, p. 64, his 29.a) |
(3) | Forðæm | eac | wæs | ðæt ðe | beforan | ðæm | temple | stod |
Because | also | was | that | before | the | temple | stood | |
æren | ceac | onuppan | twelf | ærenum | oxum | |||
brass | cauldron | upon | twelve | brass | oxen | |||
‘Because it also was that a brass cauldron upon twelve brass oxen stood before the temple’ | ||||||||
(CP:16.105.1.687) (López-Martínez 2019, p. 66, his 33) |
2. Locative Inversion in Present-Day English
(4) | In the distance appeared the towers and spires of a town which greatly resembled Oxford. (L. Bromfield, The Farm, 124) |
(Levin and Rappaport Hovav 1995, p. 218, their 1) |
(5) | a. | Unusual word order: [PPLocAUX*V LOG-SUBJ] |
b. | The main verb must be intransitive. | |
c. | The sentence must not be negated. | |
d. | The logical subject must not be an anaphoric pronoun. | |
e. | The relative familiarity constraint. | |
f. | The “Displaced speech” effect | |
(Webelhuth 2011, p. 83) |
(6) | a. | That Bill rushed into the Oval Office is believed. |
b. | *That into the Oval Office rushed Bill is believed. | |
c. | It is believed that Bill rushed into the Oval Office. | |
d. | It is believed that into the Oval Office rushed Bill. | |
(Adapted from Sasaki 1998, p. 54, his 5) |
(7) | a. | Mary said that Bill rushed into the Oval Office. |
b. | *Mary said into the Oval Office rushed Bill. |
(8) |
(9) |
(10) | a. | Over my windowsill seems to have crawled an entire army of ants. |
b. | On the hill appears to be located a cathedral. | |
(Kim 2003, p. 7, his 18) |
(11) | a. | In front of us walked Dana proudly. |
b. | *In front of us walked proudly Dana. | |
(Kim 2003, p. 9, his 28) |
3. V2 in Old English
(12) | We | habbað | hwæðere | þa | bysne | on | halgum | bocum | ||
we | have | nevertheless | the | examples | in | holy | book | |||
‘We have, nevertheless, the examples in the holy book’ | ||||||||||
(ÆCHom I, 33.474.33) |
(13) | Se | Hælend | wearð | þa | gelomlice | ætiwed | his | leornung-cnihtum | ||
the | Lord | was | then | frequently | shown | his | disciples | |||
‘The Lord then frequently appeared to his disciples’ | ||||||||||
ÆCHom I, 15.220.21) | ||||||||||
(From Fischer et al. 2000) |
(14) | Hwi | wolde | God | swa | lytles | þinges | him | forwyrnan? | ||
why | would | God | so | small | thing | him | deny | |||
‘Why should God deny him such a small thing?’ | ||||||||||
(ÆCHom I, 1.14.2) |
(15) | Ne | sceal | he | naht | unalifedes | don | ||||
not | shall | he | nothing | unlawful | do | |||||
‘He shall not do anything unlawful’ | ||||||||||
(CP 10.61.14) |
(16) | Þa | wæs | þæt | folc | þæs | micclan | welan | ungemetlice | brucende |
then | was | the | people | the | great | prosperity | excessively | partaking | |
‘Then the people were partaking excessively of the great prosperity.’ | |||||||||
(Or 1.23.3) |
(17) | On | twam | þingum | hæfde | God | þæs | mannes | sawle | gedodod |
in | two | things | had | God | the | man’s | soul | endowed | |
‘With two things God had endowed man’s soul’ | |||||||||
(ÆCHom I, 1.20.1) |
(18) | Forðon | we | sceolan | mid | ealle | mod | & | mægene | to | Gode | gecyrran |
therefore | we | must | with | all | mind | and | power | to | God | turn | |
‘Therefore we must turn to God with all our mind and power’ | |||||||||||
(HomU19 (BIHom 8) 26) |
(19) | Þæt | hi | mihton | swa | bealdlice | Godes | geleafan | bodian | |||
that | they | could | so | boldly | God’s | faith | preach | ||||
‘that they could preach God’s faith so boldly’ | |||||||||||
(ÆCHom I, 16.232.23) |
(20) | [CP [XP] C [AgrP SU1 Agr [TP SU2 …]]] |
(21) | [C [SU1 [TP SU2 (…) V (…) ]]] |
(Adapted from Haeberli 2001) |
(22) | [CP XP C [FP Discourse-Old Subj (SU1) F [TP Discourse-new Subj (SU2) T … ]]] |
(Adapted from Biberauer and van Kemenade (2011) |
4. Materials and Methods
5. Results
(23) | Sua sua | mid | liðre | wisðlunga | mon | hors | gestilleð | ||
So that | with | softer | whistles | man | horses | calm | |||
‘so that the horses are calmed still with softer whistles’ | |||||||||
(CP:21.161.12.1098) |
(24) | Forðæm | eac | wæs | ðæt ðe | beforan | ðæm | temple | stod | æren |
Because | also | was | that | before | the | temple | stood | brass | |
ceac | onuppan | twelf | ærenum | oxum | |||||
cauldron | upon | twelve | brass | oxen | |||||
‘Because it also was that a brass cauldron upon twelve brass oxen stood before the temple’ | |||||||||
(CP:16.105.1.687) |
6. Discussion
6.1. PP Anaphoricity
(25) | forþon | hit | gewis | is, | þæt | in | þam | beoþ | þa |
Because | it | certain | is | that | in | that | are | the | |
cwylmde | æfter | þam | dome | ||||||
tormented | after | the | judgement | ||||||
‘…because it is certain that the bodily inclined will be tormented in that after judgement’ | |||||||||
(GDPref_and_4_[C]:30.304.7.4517) |
(26) | Is | ðæt | ec | sæd | þætte | in | ðere | stowe, | þer | hio |
Is | that | also | said | that | in | the | place | where | they | |
ofslegne | weran, | weolle | an | welle | ||||||
slain | were | sprang | a | well | ||||||
‘It is also said that in the place where they had been slain a well sprang forth’ | ||||||||||
(Bede_5:11.418.19.4207) |
(27) | forþon þe | hie | wiston | þæt | on | hire | eardode | se | heofonlica | cyning |
because | they | knew | that | in | them | dwelled | the | heavenly | king | |
‘…because they knew that the heavenly king dwelled inside of them’ | ||||||||||
(HomU_18_[BlHom_1]:11.148.135) |
(28) | for ðan ðe | ðurh | heora | bodunge | is | þes | middaneard | gebiged | to | ðam |
because | through | their | preaching | is | this | world | turned | to | the | |
soðum | geleafan | |||||||||
true | faith | |||||||||
‘…because this world is turned to the true faith through their preaching’ | ||||||||||
(+ACHom_II,_40:302.93.6882) |
(29) | for þan ðe | on | eastdæle | is | þæs | dæges | angin | |||||
because | in | east | is | the | day’s | beginning | ||||||
‘…because the beginning of the day is in the east’ | ||||||||||||
(+ACHom_I,_8:247.162.1522) |
6.2. Subject Length
(30) | gif | on | neawiste | gestrangiað | þa | þing | þe | Gode | magon | bringan |
if | in | presence | strengthen | the | things | that | God | can | bring | |
selran | wæstm | |||||||||
better | fruit | |||||||||
‘if in that presence the things that can bring profit to God strengthen’ | ||||||||||
(GD_2_[H]:3.108.32.1083) |
(31) | Light inversion: [IP PP I [VP V NPsubj t . . . ]] |
(32) | Heavy inversion: [IP PP [IP t’subj I [VP tsubj V tPP . . . ] NPsubj ]] |
(Adapted from Culicover and Levine 2001, p. 3) |
6.3. Subject Type
(33) | for þan ðe | on | nontide | asihð | seo | sunne | ||||||
because | at | ninth hour | sets | the | sun | |||||||
‘because the sun sets at the ninth hour’ | ||||||||||||
(+ACHom_II,_5:44.97.958) |
6.4. Verb Type and Type of Clause
(34) | se | rihtwisa | is | heofen | gehaten | for þan ðe | on | rihtwisum |
the | righteous | is | heaven | called | because | in | righteous | |
mannum | is | Godes | wunung | |||||
men | is | God’s | dwelling | |||||
‘the righteous is called heaven because God’s dwelling is inside righteous men’ | ||||||||
(+ACHom_I,_19:327.64.3674) |
(35) | for þan þe | þurh | þa | twa | þing | byð | þæt | eadige | lif | begeotan |
because | through | those | two | things | is | the | blessed | life | infused | |
‘because the blessed life is infused through those two things’ | ||||||||||
(Alc_[Warn_35]:5.5) |
(36) | þæt | ofer | eow | cymeð | micel | storm | & | hreonis |
that | over | you | comes | great | storm | and | tempest | |
‘that a great storm and a tempest will come over you’ | ||||||||
(Bede_3:13.200.2.2024) |
7. Conclusions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
1 | This was part of a wider query, which included both fronted objects and PPs in subordinate clauses, with and without an inversion of the finite verb. Only data concerning fronted PPs were analysed for the present study. |
2 | |
3 | The nature of the dataset did not allow for the obtainment of data concerning embedded clauses with fronted PPs without finite verb inversion. |
References
- Biberauer, Theresa, and Ans van Kemenade. 2011. Subject positions and information-structural diversification in the history of English. Catalan Journal of Linguistics 10: 17–69. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Birner, Betty. 1996. The Discourse Function of Inversion in English. New York: Garland Publishing. [Google Scholar]
- Bolinger, Dwight. 1977. Meaning and Form. London: Longman. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Bowers, John. 1976. On surface structure grammatical relations and the structure-preserving hypothesis. Linguistic Analysis 2: 225–42. [Google Scholar]
- Bresnan, Joan. 1994. Locative inversion and the architecture of Universal Grammar. Language 70: 72–131. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Burzio, Luigi. 1986. Italian Syntax: A Government-Binding Approach. Dordrecht: Reidel. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Chomsky, Noam. 2008. On phases. In Foundational Issues in Linguistic Theory. Essays in Honor of Jean-Roger Vergnaud. Edited by Robert Freidin, Carlos P. Otero and María Luisa Zubizarreta. Cambridge: MIT Press, pp. 133–66. [Google Scholar]
- Coopmans, Peter. 1989. Where stylistic and syntactic processes meet: Locative inversion in English. Language 65: 728–51. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Culicover, Peter W., and Robert D. Levine. 2001. Stylistic inversion in English: A reconsideration. Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 19: 283–310. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Dreschler, Gea. 2015. Passives and the Loss of Verb Second: A Study of Syntactic and Information-Structural Factors. Ph.D. thesis, LOT Publications, Utrecht, The Netherlands. [Google Scholar]
- Drubig, Hans Bernhard. 1988. On the discourse function of subject verb inversion. In Essays on the English Language and Applied Linguistics on the Occasion of Gerhard Nickel’s 60th Birthday. Edited by Josef Klegraf and Dietrich Nehls. Heidelberg: Groos, pp. 83–95. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Fischer, Olga, Ans van Kemenade, Willem Koopman, and Wim van der Wurff. 2000. The Verb-Second constraint and its loss. In The Syntax of Early English (Cambridge Syntax Guides). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 104–37. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Haeberli, Eric. 2001. Speculations on the syntax of subordinate clauses in Old English. Reading Working Papers in Linguistics 5: 201–29. [Google Scholar]
- Hale, Kenneth, and Jay Keyser. 2002. Prolegomenon to a Theory of Argument Structure. Linguistic Inquiry Monograph. Cambridge: MIT Press, vol. 39. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Hoekstra, Teun, and René Mulder. 1990. Unergatives as copular verbs; locational and existential predication. The Linguistic Review 7: 1–79. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Kim, Jong-Bok. 2003. English Locative Inversion: A Constraint-Based Approach. Korean Journal of Linguistics 28: 207–35. [Google Scholar]
- Komen, Erwin. 2009. Corpus Studio. Nijmegen: Radboud University Nijmegen. [Google Scholar]
- Komen, Erwin. 2012. Cesax. Nijmegen: Radboud University Nijmegen. [Google Scholar]
- Kroch, Anthony, Ann Taylor, and Donald Ringe. 2001. The Middle English Verb-Second Constraint: A Case Study in Language Contact and Language Change. In Textual Parameters in Older Languages. Edited by Susan Hering, Peter van Reenen and Lene Schøsler. Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company, pp. 353–91. [Google Scholar]
- Levin, Beth, and Malka Rappaport Hovav. 1995. Unaccusativity. International Journal of Lexicography 10: 258–64. [Google Scholar]
- Light, Caitlin. 2012. The Information Structure of Subject Extraposition in Early New HighGerman. UPenn Working Papers in Linguistics 18: 169–77. [Google Scholar]
- López-Martínez, Sergio. 2019. Embedded Constituent Fronting in Old English: Syntactic and Information Structural Implications. Ph.D. thesis, University of Oviedo, Oviedo, Spain. [Google Scholar]
- Newmeyer, Frederick J. 1987. Presentational there-insertion and the notions root transformation and stylistic rule. Paper presented at 23rd Regional Meeting of the Chicago Linguistic Society, Chicago, IL, USA; pp. 295–308. [Google Scholar]
- Ojea, Ana. 2020. Syntax meets discourse: Locative and deictic (directional) inversion in English. Poznań Studies in Contemporary Linguistics 56: 251–76. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Pintzuk, Susan. 1991. Phrase Structures in Competition: Variation and Change in Old English Word Order. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA. [Google Scholar]
- Pintzuk, Susan. 1993. Verb seconding in Old English: Verb movement to Infl. The Linguistic Review 10: 5–35. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Postal, Paul M. 1977. About a nonargument for raising. Linguistic Inquiry 8: 141–54. [Google Scholar]
- Postal, Paul M. 2004. A paradox in English syntax. In Skeptical Linguistic Essays. Oxford: Oxford University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Quirk, Randolph, Sidney Greenbaum, Geoffrey Leech, and Jan Svartvik. 1972. A Grammar of Contemporary English. London: Longman. [Google Scholar]
- Rizzi, Luigi, and Ur Shlonsky. 2006. Satisfying the subject criterion by a non subject: English locative inversion and heavy NP shift. In Phases of Interpretation. Edited by Mara Frascarelli. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, pp. 341–61. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Rochemont, Michael, and Peter Culicover. 1990. English Focus Constructions and the Theory of Grammar. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Salvesen, Christine M., and George Walkden. 2017. Diagnosing embedded V2 in Old English and Old French. In Micro-Change and Macro-Change in Diachronic Syntax. (Oxford Studies in Diachronic and Historical Linguistics). Edited by Robert Truswell and Éric Mathieu. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 168–81. [Google Scholar]
- Sasaki, Jun. 1998. On the Embedded and Matrix Locative Inversion. Studies in European and American Culture 5: 53–67. [Google Scholar]
- Taylor, Ann, and Susan Pintzuk. 2012. The Effect of Information Structure on Object Position in Old English: A Pilot Study. In Information Structure and Syntactic Change in the History of English. Edited by Meurman-Solin Anneli, Maria Jose Lopez-Couso and Bettelou Los. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 47–65. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Taylor, Ann, Anthony Warner, Susan Pintzuk, and Frank Beths. 2003. The York-Toronto-Helsinki Parsed Corpus of Old English Prose. York: University of York, Electronic texts and manuals available from the Oxford Text Archive. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Travis, Lisa de Mena. 1984. Parameters and Effects of Word Order Variation. Ph.D. dissertation, MIT, Cambridge, MA, USA. [Google Scholar]
- Travis, Lisa de Mena. 1991. Parameters of phrase structure and verb-second phenomena. In Principles and Parameters in Comparative Grammar. Edited by Robert Freidin. Cambridge: MIT Press, pp. 339–64. [Google Scholar]
- Van Kemenade, Ans, and Bettelou Los. 2009. Discourse Adverbs and Clausal Syntax in Old and Middle English. In The Handbook of the History of English. Edited by Ans van Kemenade and Bettelou Los. Sussex: Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 224–48. [Google Scholar]
- Van Kemenade, Ans, and Tanja Milićev. 2012. Syntax and discourse in Old English and Middle English word order. In Grammatical Change: Origins, Nature, Outcomes: Proceedings of DIGS VIII. Edited by Diane Jonas and Stephen Anderson. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 237–55. [Google Scholar]
- Van Kemenade, Ans. 1997. V2 and Embedded Topicalization in Old and Middle English. In Parameters of Morphosyntactic Change. Edited by Ans van Kemenade and Nigel Vincent. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 326–51. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Warner, Anthony. 2007. Parameters of Variation between Verb-Subject and Subject-Verb Order in Late Middle English. English Language and Linguistics 11: 81–111. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Webelhuth, Gert. 2011. Motivating non-canonicality in Construction Grammar: The case of locative inversion. Cognitive Linguistics 22: 81–105. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Zwart, C. Jan-Wouter. 1991. Clitics in Dutch: Evidence for the position of INFL. Groninger Arbeiten zur germanistischen Linguistik 33: 71–92. [Google Scholar]
- Zwart, C. Jan-Wouter. 1993. Dutch Syntax: A Minimalist Approach. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands. [Google Scholar]
PP-S-V | PP-V-S | Total |
---|---|---|
255 (43.4%) | 333 (56.6%) | 588 (100%) |
PP Anaphoricity | PP-S-V | PP-V-S | Both Types |
---|---|---|---|
P + Dem | 11 (4.3%) | 3 (0.9%) | 14 (2.4%) |
P + Dem DP | 69 (27.1%) | 95 (28.5%) | 164 (27.9%) |
P + Pro | 16 (6.3%) | 28 (8.4%) | 44 (7.5%) |
P + Pro DP | 38 (14.9%) | 25 (7.5%) | 63 (10.7%) |
P + No Dem/Pro | 121 (47.5%) | 182 (54.7%) | 303 (51.5%) |
Total | 255 (100%) | 333 (100%) | 588 (100%) |
Subject Length | PP-S-V | PP-V-S | Both Types |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 112 (76.2%) | 35 (23.8%) | 147 |
2 | 78 (40.4%) | 115 (59.6%) | 193 |
3 | 41 (44.1%) | 52 (55.9%) | 93 |
4 | 8 (23.5%) | 26 (76.5%) | 34 |
4+ | 16 (13.2%) | 105 (86.8%) | 121 |
Total | 255 (43.4%) | 333 (56.6%) | 588 |
Subject Type | PP-S-V | PP-V-S | Both Types |
---|---|---|---|
Anchored NP | 23 (76.7%) | 7 (23.3%) | 30 |
Bare | 21 (42.9%) | 28 (57.1%) | 49 |
Dem | 6 (66.7%) | 3 (33.3%) | 9 |
Dem NP | 44 (26.7%) | 121 (73.3%) | 165 |
Full NP | 29 (37.2%) | 49 (62.8%) | 78 |
Indep NP | 8 (20.5%) | 31 (79.5%) | 39 |
Pro | 64 (100%) | 0 (0%) | 64 |
Pro NP | 2 (100%) | 0 (0%) | 2 |
Proper | 12 (48%) | 13 (52%) | 25 |
Quant NP | 27 (31.4%) | 59 (68.6%) | 86 |
Unknown | 19 (46.3%) | 22 (53.7%) | 41 |
Total | 255 (43.4%) | 333 (56.6%) | 588 |
Verb Type | PP-V-S |
---|---|
Be | 235 (70.6%) |
Have | 2 (0.6%) |
Modal | 25 (7.5%) |
Lexical | 71 (21.3%) |
Total | 333 (100%) |
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content. |
© 2024 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
López-Martínez, S. Locative Inversion in Old English Embedded Clauses. Languages 2024, 9, 171. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages9050171
López-Martínez S. Locative Inversion in Old English Embedded Clauses. Languages. 2024; 9(5):171. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages9050171
Chicago/Turabian StyleLópez-Martínez, Sergio. 2024. "Locative Inversion in Old English Embedded Clauses" Languages 9, no. 5: 171. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages9050171
APA StyleLópez-Martínez, S. (2024). Locative Inversion in Old English Embedded Clauses. Languages, 9(5), 171. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages9050171