2022
DOI: 10.1017/s1360674321000435
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Changes in progress in late Northumbrian: the extension of -s as genitive and plural marker

Abstract: Some of the linguistic changes which are crucial in the history of English and have traditionally been ascribed to Middle English can already be observed in late Northumbrian. One of these changes is the extension of genitive singular -es from the a-stems to other noun classes. Another is the spread of nominative/accusative plural -as from the masculine a-stems to the neuters and to other declensions. The aim of this article is to establish the actual scale on which these two interparadigmatic analogical chang… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…A comparison of these results with those obtained in Lindisfarne (Rodríguez Ledesma 2022) reveals that extension of -es is more widespread in this gloss and is also found with the nouns hernise (4x out of 4x), hreownise (1x out of 2x), soðfaestnisse (4x out of 5x), byrgenn (3x out of 3x), nedl (3x out of 3x), stow (1x out of 1x) and ae (17x out of 17x). On the other hand, the three feminine nouns which show extension of innovative -es in Rushworth 1 do not present variation in Lindisfarne, but always take this inflection: hell (1x), uoruld (11x) and naeht (3x).…”
Section: Introduction 1the Rushworth Gospelssupporting
confidence: 66%
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“…A comparison of these results with those obtained in Lindisfarne (Rodríguez Ledesma 2022) reveals that extension of -es is more widespread in this gloss and is also found with the nouns hernise (4x out of 4x), hreownise (1x out of 2x), soðfaestnisse (4x out of 5x), byrgenn (3x out of 3x), nedl (3x out of 3x), stow (1x out of 1x) and ae (17x out of 17x). On the other hand, the three feminine nouns which show extension of innovative -es in Rushworth 1 do not present variation in Lindisfarne, but always take this inflection: hell (1x), uoruld (11x) and naeht (3x).…”
Section: Introduction 1the Rushworth Gospelssupporting
confidence: 66%
“…In the Mercian gloss it is limited to three feminine nouns (hell, weoruld and naeht) and the kinship r-stem faeder, 43 whereas in Lindisfarne there is widespread extension of -es to all classes regardless of gender and declension (cf. Rodríguez Ledesma 2022). These findings highlight the importance of Anglian dialects (Mercian and Northumbrian) in the history of English, since they already provide evidence of linguistic changes that have generally been ascribed to Middle English.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 72%
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