In:Category Change from a Constructional Perspective
Edited by Kristel Van Goethem, Muriel Norde, Evie Coussé and Gudrun Vanderbauwhede
[Constructional Approaches to Language 20] 2018
► pp. 149–177
Chapter 6Category change in the English gerund
Tangled web or fine-tuned constructional network?
Published online: 22 March 2018
https://doi.org/10.1075/cal.20.06fon
https://doi.org/10.1075/cal.20.06fon
Abstract
This study considers the diachronic categorial shift from nominal (NG) to verbal gerunds (VG) in Middle English in terms of Langacker’s functional account of noun phrases and clauses as ‘deictic expressions’. The analysis shows that the Middle English gerund was essentially formally nominal but functionally hybrid, thus exhibiting ‘form-function friction’. This friction furthered a split in the gerundive system between a verbal component associated with clausal deixis, alongside a nominal component, which specialized in nominal deixis; but this split is not absolute. The constructionist idea of language as a network of (inter)paradigmatically connected constructions helps to explain why the verbal gerund seems to simultaneously drift away from and again partake in the deictic behaviour of the nominal category.
Keywords: Middle English, construction grammar, nominalization, verbalization, gerund
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Goals and methodology
- 3.Gerunds: Nominal and clausal deixis
- 3.1Qualitative analysis: Types of deixis
- 3.2Quantitative analysis: The rise of clausal deixis in bare nominal and verbal gerunds
- 4.Reflections on category change: Is the verbalization of the gerund a case of constructionalization?
- 5.Concluding remarks
Notes References
References (58)
Aarts, B. (2007). Syntactic gradience: The nature of grammatical indeterminacy. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Bergs, A., & Diewald, G. (Eds.). (2009). Contexts and Constructions. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
Barðdal, J. (2008). Productivity: Evidence from case and argument structure in Icelandic. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
Colleman, T., & De Clerck, B. (2011). Constructional semantics on the move: On semantic specialization in the English double object construction. Cognitive Linguistics, 22(1), 183–209.
Croft, W. (1991). Syntactic categories and grammatical relations: The cognitive organization of information. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
(2001). Radical Construction Grammar: Syntactic theory in typological perspective. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Dal, I. (1952). Zur Entstehung des englischen Participium Praesentis auf ‑ing
. Norsk Tidsskrift for Sprogvidenskap, 16, 5–116.
De Smet, H. (2008). Functional motivations in the development of nominal and verbal gerunds in Middle and Early Modern English. English Language and Linguistics, 12, 55–101.
(2010). English ‑ing – clauses and their problems: The structure of grammatical categories. Linguistics, 48(6), 1153–1193.
(2013). Spreading patterns: Diffusional change in the English system of complementation. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
De Smet, H., & Heyvaert, L. (2011). The meaning of present participles. English Language and Linguistics, 15, 473–498.
De Smet, H., & Van de Velde, F. (2013). Serving two masters: Form-function friction in syntactic amalgams. Studies in Language, 37(3), 534–565.
(2014). Travelling features: multiple sources, multiple destinations. Paper presented at the Eighth International Conference on Construction Grammar (ICCG8). University of Osnabrück, 3–6 September 2014.
Fanego, T. (1996). The gerund in Early Modern English: Evidence from the Helsinki Corpus. Folia Linguistica Historica, 17, 97–152.
(1998). Developments in argument linking in Early Modern English gerund phrases. English Language and Linguistics, 2(1), 87–119.
(2004). On reanalysis and actualization in syntactic change. Diachronica, 21(1), 5–25.
Fonteyn, L. (2016). From nominal to verbal gerunds: A referential typology. Functions of Language, 23(1), 82–106.
Fonteyn, L., & van de Pol, N. (2016). Divide and conquer: The formation and functional dynamics of the Modern English ing-clause network. English Language and Linguistics. Retrieved from: [URL]
Fonteyn, L., Heyvaert, L., & Maekelberghe, C. (2015). How do gerunds conceptualize events? A diachronic study. Cognitive Linguistics, 26(4), 583–612.
Francis, E. J., & Michaelis, L. A. (Eds.). (2003). Mismatch: Form-function incongruity and the architecture of grammar. Stanford: CSLI Publications.
Goldberg, A. (1995). Constructions: A Construction Grammar approach to argument structure. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
(2006). Constructions at work: The nature of generalization in language. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Hartmann, S. (2014). “Nominalization” taken literally: A diachronic corpus study of German word-formation patterns. Italian Journal of Linguistics, 26, Special Issue “New Territories in Word-Formation”, 123–156.
Heyvaert, L. (2000). Gerundive nominalization. In A. Foolen, & F. van der Leek (Eds.), Constructions in cognitive linguistics: Selected papers from the Fifth International Cognitive Linguistics Conference, Amsterdam, 1997 (pp. 103–121). Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
(2003). A cognitive-functional approach to deverbal nominalization in English. Berlin/New York: De Gruyter Mouton.
(2008). On the constructional semantics of gerundive nominalizations. Folia Linguistica, 42(1), 39–82.
Horn, G. M. (1975). On the nonsentential nature of the POSS-ING construction. Linguistic Analysis, 1(4), 333–387.
Houston, A. (1989). The English gerund: Syntactic change and discourse function. In R. W. Fasold, & D. Schiffrin (Eds.), Language change and variation (pp. 173–196). Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
Huddleston, R., & Pullum, G. K. (2002). The Cambridge grammar of the English language. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Jack, G. (1988). The origins of the English gerund. Nowele, 12, 15–75.
Jespersen, O. (1940). A Modern English grammar on historical principles (Vol. 5). London: George Allen & Unwin.
Kastovsky, D. (1985). Deverbal nouns in Old and Modern English: From stem-formation to word-formation. In J. Fisiak (Ed.), Historical semantics: Historical word formation (pp. 221–261). Berlin/New York: De Gruyter Mouton.
Killie, K., & Swan, T. (2009). The grammaticalization and subjectification of adverbial -ing clauses (converb clauses) in English. English Language and Linguistics, 13(3), 337–363.
Kohnen, T. (1996). Ausbreitungsmuster syntaktischer Standardisierung bei der Entwicklung englischer Partizipialkonstruktionen (Partizip Präsens) 1450–1700. Anglia, 114, 154–201.
(2001). The influence of ‘Latinate’ constructions in Early Modern English: Orality and literacy as complementary forces. In D. Kastovsky, & A. Mettinger (Eds.), Language contact in the history of English (pp. 171–194). Frankfurt am Main: Lang.
(2004). Text, Textsorte, Sprachgeschichte. Englische Partizipial- und Gerundialkonstruktionen 1100 bis 1700. Tübingen: Niemeyer.
Langacker, R. W. (1987). Foundations of cognitive grammar (Vol. 1). Stanford: Stanford University Press.
Malouf, R. (2000). Verbal gerunds as mixed categories in head-driven phrase structure grammar. In R. D. Borsley (Ed.), Syntax and Semantics. Volume 32. The nature and function of syntactic categories (pp. 133–166). San Diego: Academic Press.
PPCEME=Kroch, A., Beatrice, S., & Delfs, L. (2004). Penn-Helsinki parsed corpus of Early Modern English. [URL].
PPCMBE=Kroch, A., Santorini, B., & Diertani, A. (2010). Penn parsed corpus of Modern British English. Retrieved from: [URL]
Pullum, G. K. (1991). English nominal gerund phrases as noun phrases with verb-phrase heads. Linguistics, 29, 763–799.
Rohdenburg, G. (2003). Cognitive complexity and horror aequi as factors determining the use of interrogative clause linkers in English. In G. Rohdenburg, & B. Mondorf (Eds.), Determinants of grammatical variation in English (pp. 205–250). Berlin/New York: De Gruyter Mouton.
Schachter, P. (1976). A nontransformational account of gerundive nominals in English. Linguistic Inquiry, 7, 205–241.
Traugott, E. C., & Trousdale, G. (2013). Constructionalization and constructional changes. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Tuggy, D. (2007). Schematicity. In D. Geeraerts, & H. Cuyckens (Eds.), The Oxford handbook of cognitive linguistics (pp. 82–116). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Van de Velde, F. (2014). Degeneracy: The maintenance of constructional networks. In R. Boogaart, T. Colleman, & G. Rutten (Eds.), Extending the scope of construction grammar (pp. 141–179). Berlin/New York: De Gruyter Mouton.
Cited by (2)
Cited by two other publications
Maekelberghe, Charlotte
2022. From noun to verb. In English Noun Phrases from a Functional-Cognitive Perspective [Studies in Language Companion Series, 221], ► pp. 135 ff.
Fonteyn, Lauren & Charlotte Maekelberghe
2018. Competing motivations in the diachronic nominalization of English gerunds. Diachronica 35:4 ► pp. 487 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 5 december 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
