Article published In: Journal of Historical Linguistics: Online-First Articles
How fear developed from an object to a subject experiencer verb
Remarks on argument structure change
Available under the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) 4.0 license.
For any use beyond this license, please contact the publisher at rights@benjamins.nl.
Open Access publication of this article was funded through a Transformative Agreement with University of Manchester.
Published online: 2 December 2024
https://doi.org/10.1075/jhl.24003.zim
https://doi.org/10.1075/jhl.24003.zim
Abstract
This paper offers quantitative observations on the argument structural change from object to subject experiencers
for the verb fear (from causative ‘frighten’ to stative ‘feel fear’) during late medieval and Early Modern
English. The empirical statements are based on a corpus of 7.5m words spanning 1350–1600. The paper explores the precise time
course of the change, disambiguating cues and ambiguous contexts, the influence of other lexical items, and other facts. In so
doing, it reconstructs the history of the argument structure change in fear. It introduces a concept of
“polysemous competition” as a more abstract type of change exemplified by this specific case, presents a survey of observable
phenomena that may generally accompany such a development, and discusses other implications.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Material
- 2.1Corpus
- 2.2Data retrieval, correction and coding
- 3.Results
- 3.1Quantification of the time course of the change
- 3.2The extent of ambiguity
- 3.2.1Cues for the identification of the old and new argument structures
- 3.2.2Cases of ambiguity between conservative and innovative fear
- 3.2.3Evaluating the prevalence of ambiguity
- 3.3The role of related verbs
- 3.3.1Synonyms of conservative fear
- 3.3.2The a-prefix
- 3.3.3Coordination of synonyms
- 3.3.4The role of other object experiencer verbs
- 3.3.5The emergence of parenthetical uses
- 4.Discussion
- 5.Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
References
References (42)
Alexiadou, Artemis. 2016. ‘English
psych verbs and the causative alternation: A case study in the history of English.’ Questions
and Answers in
Linguistics 3:2.1–14.
. 1995. Case
Marking and Reanalysis: Grammatical Relations from Old to Early Modern
English. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Becker, Laura & Matías G. Naranjo. 2020. ‘Psych
predicates in European languages: A parallel corpus study.’ Language Typology and
Universals 73:4.483–523.
Bossong, Georg. 1998. ‘Le
marquage de l’expérient dans les langues d’Europe.’ Actance et valence dans les langues
d’Europe, ed. by Jack Feuillet, 259–294. Berlin: De Gruyter.
Bresnan, Joan & Annie Zaenen. 1990. “Deep
unaccusativity in LFG.” Grammatical Relations. A Cross-Theoretical
Perspective, ed. by Katarzyna Dziwirek, Patrick Farrell & Errapel Mejías-Bikandi, 45–57. Stanford, CA: CSLI Publications.
Brown, Meaghan, Michael Poston & Elizabeth Williamson. 2016. A
Digital Anthology of Early Modern English Drama. Folger Shakespeare Library. [URL] (Accessed 31
August 2023).
Castro-Chao, Noelia. 2021. ‘The
Development of long in Early Modern English: Impersonal Verbs of Desire in
Focus.’ Journal of the Spanish Association of Anglo-American
Studies 43:1.110–132.
Farmer, Alan B. & Zachary Lesser. 2007. DEEP:
Database of Early English Playbooks. [URL] (Accessed 8
December 2023).
Fillmore, Charles J. 1968. ‘The Case for
Case.’ Universals in Linguistic Theory, ed.
by Emmon Bach & Robert T. Harms, 1–88. New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston.
Hopper, Paul. 1991. ‘Principles
of Grammaticalization: Towards a Diachronic Typology.’ Approaches to
Grammaticalisation, ed. by Elizabeth C. Traugott & Bernd Heine, 17–35. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Inglese, Guglielmo. 2023. ‘The
rise of middle voice systems: A study in diachronic
typology.’ Diachronica 40:2.195–237.
Iyeri, Yoko. 2009. “I
fear: The Historical Development of the Verb fear and its Changing Patterns of
Complementation.” Studies in Modern
English 251.19–39.
Jespersen, Otto. 1927. A
Modern English Grammar on Historical
Principles. Volume 31. London: Allen and Unwin.
Kitis, Eliza. 2015. ‘Emotions
as discursive constructs: the case of the psych-verb fear.’ Studies in Cognitive Corpus
Linguistics, ed. by Lewandowska-Tomaszczyk Barbara & Katarzyna Dziwirek, 147–172. Frankfurt/Main: Peter Lang.
Kroch, Anthony. 1994. “Morphosyntactic
Variation.” Proceedings of the Thirteenth Annual Meeting of the Chicago Linguistic
Society, ed. by Katharine Beals, 180–201. Chicago: Chicago Linguistic Society.
Lass, Roger. 1990. ‘How
to do things with junk: exaptation in language evolution.’ Journal of
Linguistics 26:1.79–102.
Liljencrants, Johan & Björn Lindblom. 1972. ‘Numerical
simulation of vowel quality systems: the role of perceptual
contrast.’ Language 48:4.839–862.
Liu, Meichun. 2016. ‘Emotion
in lexicon and grammar: lexical-constructional interface of Mandarin emotional
predicates.’ Lingua
Sinica 2:4.1–47.
Markus, Manfred. 2002. “The
Innsbruck Prose Corpus: Its concept and usability in Middle English lexicology.” A Changing
World of Words: Studies in English Historical Lexicography, Lexicology and Semantics, ed.
by Javier E. Díaz Vera, 464–83. Amsterdam: Brill.
Messenger, Katherine, Holly P. Branigan, Janet F. McLean & Antonella Sorace. 2012. ‘Is
young children’s passive syntax semantically constrained? Evidence from syntactic
priming.’ Journal of Memory and
Language 661:568–87.
Michigan Library DCC. 2018. The Corpus of
Middle English Prose and Verse. [URL] (Accessed 19 October 2013)
Möhlig-Falke, Ruth. 2012. The
Early English Impersonal Construction: An Analysis of Verbal and Constructional
Meaning. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Peterson, Clifford J. 1974. ‘The Pearl-Poet and John Massey
of Cotton, Cheshire.’ The Review of English Studies New
Series. 251.257–66.
Rott, Julian A., Elisabeth Verhoeven & Paola Fritz-Huechante. 2020. ‘Valence
orientation and psych properties: Toward a typology of the psych alternation.’ Open
Linguistics 61:401–423.
Taavitsainen, Irma & Päivi Pahta. 2010. Early
Modern English Medical Texts: Corpus Description and
Studies. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Text Creation Partnership
(TCP). 2022. Early English Books Online (EEBO). [URL] (Accessed 31 October 2023).
Taylor, Ann, Anthony Warner, Susan Pintzuk & Frank Beths. 2003. The
York-Toronto Helsinki Corpus of Old English Prose (YCOE). Oxford Text Archive. [URL] (Accessed 13 December 2023)
Thompson, Sandra A. & Anthony Mulac. 1990. ‘The
discourse conditions for the use of the complementizer that in conversational English.’ Journal
of Pragmatics 151.237–251.
Timberlake, Alan. 1977. ‘Reanalysis
and actualization in syntactic change.’ Mechanisms of Syntactic
Change, ed. by Charles Li, 141–77. Austin: University of Texas Press.
Traugott, Elizabeth C. 1989. ‘On the Rise of Epistemic
Meanings in English: An Example of Subjectification in Semantic
Change.’ Language 65:1.31–55.
Trips, Carola. 2020. ‘Impersonal
and reflexive uses of Middle English psych verbs under contact influence with Old
French.’ Linguistics
Vanguard 6:2.1–14.
Van Gelderen, Elly. 2014. ‘Changes
in Psych-verbs: A reanalysis of little v.’ Catalan Journal of
Linguistics 131.99–122.
Van Valin, Robert Jr. & Randy LaPolla. 1997. Syntax.
Structure, meaning and function. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Wallenberg, Joel. 2019. ‘A
variational theory of specialization in acquisition and diachrony.’ The Determinants of
Diachronic Stability, ed. by Anne Breitbarth, Miriam Bouzouita, Lieven Danckaert & Melissa Farasyn, 245–262. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.