1 / 33

On the role of frequency in the grammatical constructionalization of the passive construction

On the role of frequency in the grammatical constructionalization of the passive construction. Peter Petré KU Leuven / FWO Leuven – 14 July 2014. introduction. Diachronic construction grammar. Historical linguistics construction grammar Construction non-compositional form + meaning

chipo
Télécharger la présentation

On the role of frequency in the grammatical constructionalization of the passive construction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. On the role of frequency in the grammatical constructionalization of the passive construction Peter Petré KU Leuven / FWO Leuven – 14 July 2014

  2. introduction

  3. Diachronic construction grammar • Historical linguistics construction grammar • Construction • non-compositional form + meaning • may be compositional if sufficiently frequent (Goldberg 2006)

  4. Grammaticalization • Grammaticalization in a cxn framework (Traugott & Trousdale 2013) • Grammatical constructionalization • form change + • meaning change • Only form or meaning • = constructional change • ≠ a new construction

  5. Frequency? • Where does frequency come in? • Some have used frequency to demonstrate functional change (e.g. Hilpert 2013) • What about its relation to form change? • Traugott & Trousdale 2013 “frequency is not considered as a factor since ‘sufficient frequency’ is not operationalizable” “Bybee (2003) treats frequency as a mechanism. In our view it is not a mechanism, but an epiphenomenon of routinization and schematization, etc.”

  6. The passive construction • Instance of grammatical constructionalization • Copular construction with adjectival participle • They are married and happy. • ≠ Someone married and *happied them. • Resultative in-between category (Toyota 2008) • At first her anchor was broken through the force of the gale. • The force of the gale = cause ≠ personal agent • Diathetic alternative of the active • The house was (being) ransacked by gang-members • = Gang-members ransacked/were ransacking the house

  7. Topic · Long passives • Long passives over 1051-1640 • Prepositions: from, through, of, by • By develops into the preposition of passives • How does by’s combinatorial potential relate to the grammaticalization of the passive more generally?

  8. Original backgrounding function • Form • Predicative adjective • No grammaticalized preposition of the agent • Function • Backgrounding of the agent (1) Þara geleafan & gehwyrfednesse is sægd þæt se cyning swa wære efnblissende. ‘In their faith and conversion (it) is said that the king was equally rejoicing.’ (c925(a900), Bede)

  9. Form change • Evidence was mostly of a qualitative nature • Loss of adjectival endings on participles • Reduction of auxiliary choice (wesan/weorðan) to only one (Petré 2014) • Prepositional passive (2) He was highly thought of (?13th ct. [Denison 1985]) (3)*He is afraid of (if someone is afraid of him) • Recipient passive (4) She was given a book. (?14th ct. [Allen 1995])

  10. Function change? • The appearance of PP & IO passives is explained as a signal of the new topicalizing function of the passive (Seoane 2006, Los 2009) • What is topicalization? How does topicalization (of patient) differ from backgrounding (of agent)?

  11. Initial situation • Preverbal elements were topical-given (Los 2012) • Subjects of ‘pre-passive’ were ‘naturally’ topical (5) He fought for hours. Then was he killed by Sigefrid. • Subject is typically kept constant (e.g. protagonist) • Is known & needs not appear initially • Various elements allowed in preverbal position (6) Since then thought man/people highly of Sigefrid & him gave man many gifts. • Local anchors (then) • Empty man in active constructions • Non-nominative topic (him gave man)

  12. New situation • Replacement of V2 by SV • Only the subject can occupy unmarked topic slot • Alternatives (þa ‘then’, man) decline • Subject has to do the work and set a contentful topic & link to preceding discourse • Range of subjects increases • more inanimates • members of less prototypically transitive situations (7) I have listed a book on Amazon called JFK: Absolute Proof. The book is selling on Amazon for over $200.00. [~ I’m selling the book ...])

  13. New types of passive • Range of subjects increases ~ new passives (8)He fought for hours until he was killed by Sigefrid/Sigefrid killed him. Since then Sigefrid is highly thought of& he was given many gifts. (9) There was another hospital of S. John yn the town ... This hospitale was foundid by Hughe, bisshop (1501-1570) (9’)*This hospitale founded Hugh, bisshop.

  14. Research question

  15. Frequency · effect or factor? • General increase in inanimate subjects (Toyota 2008:161) • According to Traugott & Trousdale (2013) the increase of inanimate subjects would be a mere effect of the routinization of the new topicalizing function.

  16. Long passives & inanimacy • Seoane (2010) shows that long passives with by predominantly select inanimate subjects in Early Modern English. • History of long passives may learn us something about what happened to the passive.

  17. Paradigmatization pathway • Preposition of the agent = paradigmatization • Pre-grammaticalization • of, from, through, with, mid, at, for, by • Post-grammaticalization • by (of, with) • What does the selection of by tell us about • the functional change of the passive? • the role of frequency in this change?

  18. methodology

  19. LEON 0.3 • Meta-corpus covering Old English-1640 • Existing corpora (YCOE, PPCME2, HC, LAEME 2.1,MEG-C) • New transcriptions • 400,000 words/period • Genre-balanced • Dialect-balanced • Aimed at making cross-genre quantitative analysis across subperiods more reliable

  20. Data • Work in progress • Queried LEON for • BE & Pple & {FROM,THROUGH,OF,BY} • in any order • with max. 3 words intervening each time • Currently 253 instances analysed for various factors • 1051-1150: parsed texts in LEON, analysed exhaustively • 1251-1350: parsed + non-parsed, sample analysed • 1351-1420: parsed, sample analysed • 1501-1570: parsed, sample analysed

  21. analysis

  22. Paradigmatization

  23. By~ animacy of the agent • Prepositional functions relate to their object? • Perhaps, but no clear relation with passive

  24. By ~ animacy of the subject • By also correlates with inanimate subjects!

  25. Consistent behaviour

  26. Semantics of by • Originally • from, of = denote source • through, by = denote pathway • from, of more naturally used for highly transitive situations (where agent = cause = source of transitive event) • through, by more suitable for less prototypically transitive situations (where PP-object ≠ agent) (10) Þe siȝth is shewed hym by þe Aungel. (c1350)

  27. Conclusion

  28. Frequency, more than an effect • Change in English word order put pressure on language user to find ways of encoding the topic as a subject • This led to an increased use of e.g. inanimate subjects • Long passives with ‘less transitive’ by ‘along’ • had a higher proportion of inanimate subjects • could more easily be extended to new passives • By’s skewed frequency distribution made it the most accessible option for new passives • Frequency can be a factor influencing the grammaticalization pathway of the passive

  29. Long passives & the passive • By becomes predominant preposition around same time that ‘special’ passives become productive (ca. 1400) • Agents formerly expressed by e.g. of were more and more expressed by by • This may be called ‘formal micro-change’ (at the level of individual constructs) • This frequency fact provides independent evidence that constructional grammaticalization has taken place

  30. Road work ahead • Analyse more data • Look into with, mid, at & for

  31. References

  32. References Bybee, Joan. 2003. Mechanisms of change in grammaticization. In Brian Joseph & Richard Janda (eds.), The handbook of historical linguistics, 602-623. Oxford: Blackwell. Goldberg, Adele. 2006. Constructions at work: the nature of generalization in language. Oxford: OUP. Hilpert, Martin. 2013. Constructional Change in English: Developments in Allomorphy, Word Formation, and Syntax. Cambridge: CUP. LEON 0.3. Leuven English Old to New, version 0.3. 2013. Compiled by Peter Petré. (lirias.kuleuven.be/handle/123456789/396725). Los, Bettelou. 2009. The consequences of the loss of verb-second in English: Information structure and syntax in interaction. English Language and Linguistics 13(1). 97-125. Los, Bettelou. 2012. The loss of verb-second and the switch from bounded to unbounded systems. In Anneli Meurman-Solin et al. (eds.), Information structure and syntactic change in the history of English, 21-46. Oxford: OUP. Petré, Peter. 2014. Constructions and environments: Copular, Passive and related Constructions in Old and Middle English. Oxford: OUP. (lirias.kuleuven.be/handle/123456789/366310) Seoane, Elena. 2006. Information Structure and Word Order Change: The Passive as an Information-rearranging Strategy in the History of English. In Ans van Kemenade & Bettelou Los (eds.), Handbook of the History of English, 360–391. Oxford: Basil Blackwell. Seoane, Elena. 2010. The effect of prominence hierarchies on Modern English long passives: Pragmatic vs. syntactic factors. Miscelánea. A Journal of English and American Studies 41. 93-106. Toyota, Junichi. 2008. Diachronic change in the English passive. Basingstoke: Palgrave. Traugott, Elizabeth & Graeme Trousdale. 2013. Constructionalization and Constructional Changes. Oxford: OUP.

  33. Thank you!Peter Petrépeter.petre@arts.kuleuven.be

More Related