In:English Historical Linguistics: Historical English in contact
Edited by Bettelou Los, Chris Cummins, Lisa Gotthard, Alpo Honkapohja and Benjamin Molineaux
[Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 359] 2022
► pp. 35–56
Chapter 3An account of the use of fronting and clefting in Cornish English
Published online: 2 February 2022
https://doi.org/10.1075/cilt.359.03cor
https://doi.org/10.1075/cilt.359.03cor
Abstract
Unlike Standard English, Celtic English varieties
generally use word order shifts or special syntactic devices to give
emphasis to a specific clausal constituent. This study analyses the
frequency of use of focusing devices in a number of Cornish English stories
and compares the results with those obtained in other studies for other
Celtic English varieties. Likewise, this chapter attempts to provide an
explanation for why Cornish English shows a preference for fronting over
clefting by referring to the structure of focal constructions in Cornish.
Finally, I offer an account of the discourse-pragmatic functions of fronting
and clefting in Cornish English and compares them with those found in
Standard English to provide evidence in support of its Celtic
substratum.
Keywords: Cornish English, fronting, clefting, Celtic substratum influence
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.The introduction and spread of English in Cornwall
- 3.Cornish English
- 4.Focusing devices
- 5.Corpus and methodology
- 6.Analysis
- 7.A possible source for Cornish English fronting and the Celtic hypothesis
- 8.Conclusion
Acknowledgements Notes Sources References Appendix
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