In:Keys to the History of English: Diachronic linguistic change, morpho-syntax and lexicography
Edited by Thijs Porck, Moragh S. Gordon and Luisella Caon
[Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 363] 2024
► pp. 10–33
Parataxis and hypotaxis in the history of English
Published online: 4 April 2024
https://doi.org/10.1075/cilt.363.01wal
https://doi.org/10.1075/cilt.363.01wal
Abstract
The claim that parataxis precedes hypotaxis in the history of English is an idea with a long pedigree;
however, the empirical evidence for it is limited. In this chapter, I revisit the question of parataxis and hypotaxis
diachronically, focusing on two different claims. The first is the idea that finite clausal complementation emerged
from clausal juxtaposition. Following Axel-Tober (2012, 2017), I argue that this scenario is implausible. The second is the idea that
the proportion of subordinate clauses increases gradually over time. This quantitative claim can be assessed using
parsed historical corpora. No gradual increase can be observed; rather, we see substantial genre-conditioned
variation. I conclude that the idea of parataxis preceding hypotaxis might be ready for retirement.
Keywords: parataxis, hypotaxis, clause structure, reanalysis, complementation
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Does finite clausal complementation emerge from juxtaposition?
- 2.1That-complementation in English and clause fusion
- 2.2That-complementation in English: Problems with the standard scenario
- 2.3That-complementation in English: An alternative scenario
- 3.Do subordinate clauses become more frequent over the history of
English?
- 3.1Frequency of clause types: Sources and methods
- 3.2Frequency of clause types: Hypotaxis level results
- 3.3Frequency of clause types: More fine-grained distinctions
- 4.Summary and conclusion
Acknowledgments Notes References
References (62)
Axel-Tober, K. 2009. Die
Entstehung des dass-Satzes–ein neues
Szenario. In V. Ehrich, C. Fortmann, I. Reich, & M. Reis (Eds.), Koordination
und Subordination im
Deutschen, 21–41. Buske.
2012. (Nicht-)kanonische
Nebensätze im Deutschen: Synchrone und diachrone
Aspekte. Mouton de Gruyter.
2017. The
development of the declarative complementizer in
German. Language (Historical
Syntax) 93. e29–e65.
Bartoń, K. 2009. MuMIn:
multi-model inference. [URL]
Bates, D., M. Mächler, B. Bolker & S. Walker. 2015. Fitting
Linear Mixed-Effects Models Using lme4. Journal of
Statistical
Software 67. 1–48.
Bech, K. 2001. Word
order patterns in Old and Middle English: A syntactic and pragmatic
study [Unpublished doctoral
dissertation]. University of Bergen.
Behaghel, O. 1877. Über
die Entstehung der abhängigen Rede und die Ausbildung der Zeitfolge im
Altdeutschen. Schöningh.
Biber, D. 1995. Dimensions
of register variation: A cross-linguistic
comparison. Cambridge University Press.
Biber, D. & B. Gray. 2016. Grammatical
complexity in academic English: Linguistic change in
writing. Cambridge University Press.
Chafe, W. 1982. Integration
and involvement in speaking, writing, and oral
literature. In D. Tannen (Ed.), Spoken
and written language: Exploring orality and
literacy, 35–53. Ablex.
Dąbrowska, E. 2015. Language
in the mind and in the
community. In J. Daems, E. Zenner, K. Heylen, D. Speelman, & H. Cuyckens (Eds.), Change
of paradigms – new paradoxes: recontextualizing language and
linguistics, 221–236. de Gruyter.
Eythórsson, T. 1995. Verbal
syntax in the early Germanic languages [Unpublished doctoral
dissertation]. Cornell University.
Haegeman, L. & C. Greco. 2018. West
Flemish V3 and the interaction of syntax and
discourse. Journal of Comparative Germanic
Linguistics 21. 1–56.
Hale, K. 1976. The
adjoined relative clause in
Australia. In R. M. W. Dixon (Ed.), Grammatical
categories in Australian
languages, 78–105. AIAS and Humanities Press.
Harris, A. C. & L. Campbell. 1995. Historical
syntax in cross-linguistic perspective. Cambridge University Press.
Karlsson, F. 2009. Origin
and maintenance of clausal embedding
complexity. In G. Sampson, D. Gil & P. Trudgill (Eds.), Language
complexity as an evolving
variable, 192–202. Oxford University Press.
Kiparsky, P. 1995. Indo-European
origins of Germanic
syntax. In A. Battye & I. G. Roberts (Eds.), Clause
structure and language
change, 140–169. Oxford University Press.
Kroch, A., B. Santorini & L. Delfs. 2004. The
Penn-Helsinki Parsed Corpus of Early Modern
English (PPCEME).
Kroch, A., B. Santorini & A. Diertani. 2016. The
Penn Parsed Corpus of Modern British English, 2nd
edn. (PPCMBE2).
Kuznetsova, A., Brockhoff, P. B. & Christensen, R. H. B. 2017. lmerTest
Package: Tests in Linear Mixed Effects Models. Journal of
Statistical
Software 82. 1–26.
Mackie, S. A. 2008. The
revival of the parataxis hypothesis in North American linguistics of the nineteen
seventies [Unpublished doctoral
dissertation]. University of Melbourne.
2012. Gaps,
transitions, adjoining, embedding: Kenneth Hale on the reanalysis and grammaticalization of the relative
clause. Language and
History 55. 102–122.
Nakagawa, S., P. C. D. Johnson & H. Schielzeth. 2017. The
coefficient of determination R2 and intra-class correlation coefficient from generalized linear mixed-effects
models revisited and expanded. J R Soc
Interface 14, 20170213.
Nicholas, N. 1998. The
story of pu: The grammaticalization in space and time of a Modern Greek
complementizer [Unpublished doctoral
dissertation]. University of Melbourne.
Petré, P. 2019. How
constructions are born: The role of patterns in the constructionalization of be going to
INF. In B. Busse & R. Möhlig-Falke (Eds.), Patterns
in language and
linguistics, 157–192. Mouton de Gruyter.
Pintzuk, S. 1999. Phrase
structures in competition: Variation and change in Old English word
order. Garland.
Rissanen, M. 1989. Three
problems connected with the use of diachronic
corpora. ICAME
Journal 13. 16–19.
Roberts, I. G. & A. Roussou. 2003. Syntactic
change: A minimalist approach to
grammaticalization. Cambridge University Press.
Rohdenburg, G. 2006. The
role of functional constraints in the evolution of the English complementation
system. In C. Dalton-Puffer, D. Kastovsky, N. Ritt & H. Schendl (Eds.), Syntax,
style and grammatical norms: English from
1500–2000, 143–166. Peter Lang.
Speyer, A. 2011. Zur
Integriertheit kausaler (Neben-)Sätze im
Frühneuhochdeutschen. Sprachwissenschaft 36. 53–84.
Szmrecsányi, B. 2012. Analyticity
and syntheticity in the history of
English. In T. Nevalainen & E. C. Traugott (Eds.), The
Oxford handbook of the history of
English, 654–665. Oxford University Press.
2016. An
analytic-synthetic spiral in the history of
English. In E. van Gelderen (Ed.), Cyclical
change
continued, 93–112. John Benjamins.
Taylor, A., A. Warner, S. Pintzuk & F. Beths. 2003. The
York-Toronto-Helsinki Parsed Corpus of Old English
Prose.
Thorgeirsson, H. 2012. Late
placement of the finite verb in Old Norse fornyrðislag
meter. Journal of Germanic
Linguistics 24. 233–269.
Traugott, E. C. 1992. Syntax. In R. M. Hogg (Ed.), The
Cambridge history of the English language. Volume 1: The
beginnings
to 1066, 168–289. Cambridge University Press.
Van Gelderen, E. 2004. Economy,
innovation, and prescriptivism: From spec to head and head to
head. Journal of Comparative Germanic
Linguistics 7. 59–98.
Van Kemenade, A. & M. Westergaard. 2012. Syntax
and information structure: Verb-second variation in Middle
English. In A. Meurman-Solin, M. J. López-Couso & B. Los (Eds.), Information
structure and syntactic change in the history of
English, 87–118. Oxford University Press.
2021. Against
mechanisms: Towards a minimal theory of
change. In U. Detges, R. Waltereit, E. Winter-Froemel & A. C. Wolfsgruber (Eds.), Whither
reanalysis?, special issue of Journal of Historical
Syntax 5 (33). 1–27.
Walkden, G. & H. Booth. 2020. Reassessing
the historical evidence for embedded
V2. In R. Woods & S. Wolfe (Eds.), Rethinking
verb-second, 536–554. Oxford University Press.
Weiß, H. 2020. Where
do complementizers come from and how did they come about? A re-evaluation of the parataxis-to-hypotaxis
hypothesis. Evolutionary Linguistic
Theory 2. 30–55.
2021. Reanalysis
involving rebracketing and relabeling: a special
type. In U. Detges, R. Waltereit, E. Winter-Froemel & A. C. Wolfsgruber (Eds.), Whither
reanalysis?, special issue of Journal of Historical
Syntax 5 (39). 1–26.
Whitman, J. 2012. Misparsing
and syntactic
reanalysis. In A. van Kemenade & N. de Haas (Eds.), Historical
Linguistics 2009: Selected papers from the 19th international conference on historical
linguistics, 69–87. John Benjamins.
Wickham, H. 2016. ggplot2:
Elegant Graphics for Data Analysis. [URL].
