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Diachrony and Dialects: Grammatical Change in the Dialects of Italy (Oxford Studies in Diachronic and Historical Linguistics)

✍ Scribed by Paola Beninca (editor), Adam Ledgeway (editor), Nigel Vincent (editor)


Publisher
Oxford University Press
Year
2014
Tongue
English
Leaves
376
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


This book examines diachronic change and diversity in the morphosyntax of Romance varieties spoken in Italy. These varieties offer an especially fertile terrain for research into language change, because of both the richness of dialectal variation and the length of the period of textual attestation. While attention in the past has been focussed on the variation found in phonology, morphology, and vocabulary, this volume examines variation in morphosyntactic structures, covering a range of topics designed to exploit and explore the interaction of the geographical and historical dimensions of change. The opening chapter sets the scene for specialist and non-specialist readers alike, and establishes the conceptual and empirical background. There follow a series of case studies investigating the morphosyntax of verbal and (pro)nominal constructions and the organization of the clause. Data are drawn from the full range of Romance dialects spoken within the borders of modern Italy, ranging f

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
Diachrony and Dialects: Grammatical Change in the Dialects of Italy
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Series preface
Preface
For Mair Parry
List of abbreviations
Notes on contributors
1: Similarity and diversity in the evolution of Italo-Romance morphosyntax
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Dialects
1.3 Diachrony
1.4 Sources of data
1.5 History and theory: analysis and synthesis in the verbal system
1.5.1 Typology
1.5.2 Compositionality
1.5.3 Paradigmaticity
1.6 The chapters
Part I: Verbal Structures
2: The development of the southern subjunctive: Morphological loss and syntactic gain
2.1 Introduction
2.2 Morphological marking of the indicative/subjunctive opposition in the south
2.2.1 The subjunctive
2.2.2 Dual complementizer systems
2.2.3 Summary of findings
2.3 Syntactic marking of the indicative/subjunctive opposition in the south
2.3.1 Verb movement
2.3.2 Dual complementizer systems
2.4 Summary and conclusions
3: Perfective auxiliation in Italo-Romance: The complementarity of historical and modern cross-dialectal evidence
3.1 Introduction
3.2 The basics: perfective auxiliation and the unaccusative hypothesis
3.3 Diachrony: intersections between modern dialect comparison and historical data
3.3.1 Old Florentine
3.3.2 Old Romanesco
3.4 Bringing the historical and modern cross-dialectal evidence together
3.4.1 Perfective auxiliation in Agnonese
3.4.2 Perfective auxiliation in Picernese
3.5 Conclusion
4: Passive and impersonal reflexives in the Italian dialects: Synchronic and diachronic aspects
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Passive and impersonal reflexives in Standard Italian
4.2.1 Passive(/impersonal) and impersonal si
4.2.2 Impersonal of reflexive patterns
4.2.3 Impersonal reflexive: interpretation of the morpheme si
4.2.4 Some controversial issues
4.3 Passive and impersonal reflexives in the Italian dialects
4.3.1 Passive vs impersonal reflexives
4.3.2 Grammatical domains
4.3.3 Nature of the subject
4.3.4 Tense/aspect constraints
4.3.5 Impersonal si/se with a pronominal object
4.3.6 Interpretation of impersonal si
4.3.7 Interim summary
4.4 Some diachronic data
4.4.1 Old Venetian
4.4.2 Old Lombard
4.4.3 Old Florentine
4.4.4 Old Neapolitan
4.4.5 Old Logudorese Sardinian
4.4.6 Interim summary
4.5 Converging constraints on impersonal
4.6 Some unsolved issues: the status of the reflexive morphemes si and ci
4.6.1 One or two si’s?
4.6.2 Impersonal ci
4.7 Conclusions
5: On the personal infinitive in Sicilian
5.1 Introduction
5.2 The personal infinitive in early Sicilian
5.3 The personal infinitive in modern Sicilian
5.4 Conclusion
6: Glimpsing the future: Some rare anomalies in the history of the Italo-Romance and Gallo-Romance future and conditional stem, and what they suggest about paradigm structure
6.1 The facts
6.2 Semantic or phonological causation?
6.3 An accidental association?
6.4 The mechanism of the change
7: Person endings in the old Italian verb system
7.1 Introduction
7.2 Verb endings in old Italian
7.2.1 Simple endings: 1st, 2nd, and 3rd persons singular
7.2.2 The complex ending of the third person plural
7.3 Concluding remarks
Part II: (Pro)nominal Structures
8: The evolution of Italo-Romance clitic clusters: Prosodic restructuring and morphological opacity
8.1 Introduction
8.2 The emergence of the mirror order
8.3 Separability
8.4 Allomorphy
8.5 Suppletion
8.6 Root incorporation
8.7 Italian
8.8 Conclusions
9: Subject clitics and macroparameters
9.1 Introduction
9.2 Microand macroparametric variation
9.2.1 In favour of microparameters
9.2.2 In favour of macroparameters
9.2.3 Conclusion
9.3 Macroparameters and markedness
9.4 Parametric hierarchies
9.4.1 Word order
9.4.2 The null-argument hierarchy
9.5 Northern Italian subject clitics and the null-argument hierarchy
9.6 The difference between subjects and objects
9.7 Conclusion
10: Sicilian 1st and 2nd person oblique tonic pronouns: A historical and comparative examination
10.1 Conservation and innovation in Romance pronominal systems
10.2 1sg and 2sg oblique tonic pronouns in early and modern Sicilian: Romance equivalents and etymological hypotheses
10.3 Textual evidence from early literary Sicilian
10.4 Textual data, areal data, and diachronic developments
10.5 Conclusions
11: Patterns of variation and diachronic change in Piedmontese object clitic syntax
11.1 Introduction
11.2 Piedmontese object clitic syntax
11.2.1 The diachronic change in Piedmontese object clitic syntax
11.2.2 Synchronic variability in Piedmontese object clitic syntax
11.3 Relatable facts in Fassano and Spanish
11.3.1 The case of Fassano infinitive+OCL structures
11.3.2 Evidence of an OCL hierarchy: variation in Spanish dialect OCL syntax
11.4 Diachronic change in Piedmontese object clitic syntax revisited: the Functional Hierarchy Hypothesis
11.4.1 OCL ordering in Piedmontese
11.4.2 The structure of the compound tense in Romance and post-participial OCL placement in modern Piedmontese
11.4.3 Diachronic change in Piedmontese OCL syntax and the case of se
11.5 Conclusions
12: Gender assignment and pluralization in Italian and the Veneto
12.1 Recent work on the theme
12.2 Pluralization, gender assignment, and shift in the Veneto (Neo-Venetian)
12.3 Conclusion
13: Kind-defining relative clauses in the diachrony of Italian
13.1 Introduction
13.1.1 Relative clauses in Italian
13.1.2 Relatives with resumptive clitics in modern colloquial Italian
13.1.3 Early Italian relatives with resumptive clitics
13.2 Kind-defining relatives
13.2.1 Kind-defining contact relatives in English
13.2.2 Kind-defining headless relatives in Italian
13.3 Properties of post-copular kind-defining relatives
13.4 Deriving the properties of kind-defining relatives
13.5 Postand pre-copular position (canonical and inverse predication)
13.6 Raising and matching derivations of kind-defining relatives
13.7 Post-copular relatives and agreement
13.8 Conclusions and speculations
14: Synchronic and diachronic clues on the internal structure of β€˜where’ in Italo-Romance
14.1 Introduction
14.2 Theoretical background
14.3 The formatives of β€˜where’ in northern Italian dialects
14.4 Matching the structure of locative PPs
14.5 Ubiquitous β€˜where’: relative, interrogative, and prepositional forms
14.5.1 Relative vs interrogative clauses
14.5.2 Dove inside locative expressions
14.5.3 Other usages
14.6 Concluding remarks
References
Index
OXFORD STUDIES IN DIACHRONIC AND HISTORICAL LINGUISTICS


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