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1
Suffixes in Competition: On the Use of -our and -or in Early Modern English
In: International Journal of English Studies; Vol. 20 No. 2 (2020): Standardisation and Change in Early Modern English: Empirical Approaches ; 169-183 ; International Journal of English Studies; Vol. 20 Núm. 2 (2020): Standardisation and Change in Early Modern English: Empirical Approaches ; 1989-6131 ; 1578-7044 (2020)
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2
The Intensifiers this/that in Some Varieties of English
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3
‘We kissed one another and parted good friends.’ On the expression of reciprocity in Early Modern English
In: Onomázein: Revista de lingüística, filología y traducción de la Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, ISSN 0718-5758, Nº. 48, 2020, pags. 45-68 (2020)
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4
Scribal punctuation of coordinate and subordinate clauses in Late Middle English and Early Modern English
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5
Third person present tense markers in some varieties of English
In: English world-wide. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins 38 (2017) 1, 77-103
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6
That-clauses: Retention and Omission of Complementizer that in some Varieties of English
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7
‘I got into the room by means of a picklock key and found him’ Complex Prepositions in Early Modern English
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8
The split infintive in Middle English
In: North-Western European language evolution. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins 68 (2015) 2, 227-250
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9
"'It is not exactly that bad': on the use of the intensifiers this and that in english
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10
On the use of "that"/"zero" as object clause links in early English medical writing
In: Studia neophilologica. - New York, NY [u.a.] : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 86 (2014) 1, 1-16
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11
On the history of the intensifier "wonder" in English
In: Australian journal of linguistics. - Basingstoke, Hampshire : Taylor & Francis 34 (2014) 3, 399-419
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12
‘Give hit him with great honour’: on the Double Object Construction in Late Middle English
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13
On the Use of make to vs. make ø in early English Medical Writing
Abstract: OBJECT INFINITIVE CONSTRUCTIONS are the most frequent type of non-finite complement clauses, in which the object infinitive may occur either marked (+TO) e.g. to-infinitive or unmarked (-TO) e.g. bare infinitive (Fischer 1992: 316). From a historical point of view, the bare infinitive is found to be the preferred form in Old English, the number of examples being comparatively small though. This picture changed drastically in Middle English, when the to-infinitive outnumbers the bare infinitive in this kind of clause (Visser 1973: 2235). In the early Modern English period, however, both constructions coexisted with the same set of verbs, even though there are conditioning factors triggering the use of a particular type of construction. Among others, the existence of intervening elements between the matrix verb and the object infinitive is found to play a decisive role in the choice of to- or the bare infinitive (Rissanen 1999: 286). The present paper aims to deal with object infinitive constructions in early Modern English with the following three objectives: a) to analyze the use and distribution of marked and unmarked infinitives in the following object-controlling verbs: cause, make, procure, send, entreat, let, suffer, wish, forbid and teach, among others; b) to classify the phenomenon in different text-types; and c) to evaluate if the following factors condition the use of these constructions, i.e. i) the presence of intervening elements between the matrix verb and the object infinitive; ii) the position of the infinitive clause with respect to the matrix clause, whether fronted or not; and iii) the use of coordinated infinitives (Rohdenburg 1996: 156). The data used as source of evidence come from the Electronic Text Edition of Depositions (1560-1760) and the Corpus of Early English Medical Writing, i.e. Early Modern English Medical Texts (EMEMT for the period 1500-1700). ; Universidad de Málaga. Campus de Excelencia Internacional Andalucía Tech.
Keyword: Corpus Linguistics; Early Modern English; Inglés - Sintaxis; Middle English; Object Infinitive Constructions
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10630/8291
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14
Finite Complementation in Early English Medical Writing: A case Study of Syntactic Constructions in Competition
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15
Testing Delta on the «Disputed Federalist Papers»
In: International Journal of English Studies; Vol. 12 No. 2 (2012): A New Approach to Literature: Corpus Linguistics; 133-150 ; International Journal of English Studies; Vol. 12 Núm. 2 (2012): A New Approach to Literature: Corpus Linguistics; 133-150 ; 1989-6131 ; 1578-7044 (2012)
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16
From the manuscript to the screen: implementing electronic editions of mediaeval handwritten material
In: Studia Anglica Posnaniensia. - Poznań : Wydawn. Naukowe Uniw. 46 (2010) 3, 3-20
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17
Post-adpositions in Old English
In: English studies. - Abingdon : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 91 (2010) 1, 89-111
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18
"Gehyrdon ge þœt gecweden wæs" - a corpus-based approach to verb-initial constructions in Old English
In: Studia neophilologica. - New York, NY [u.a.] : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 82 (2010) 1, 49-57
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19
Morphological features in the translatorship attribution of the West Saxon gospels
In: English studies. - Abingdon : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 89 (2008) 2, 210-225
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20
The punctuation system of Elizabethan legal documents: the case of G.U.L. MS Hunter 3 (S.1.3)
In: The review of English studies. - Oxford [u.a.] : Univ. Press 59 (2008) 240, 356-378
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