Review published In: Review of Cognitive Linguistics
Vol. 13:1 (2015) ► pp.257–261
Book review
. Constructional change in English: Developments in allomorphy, word formation, and syntax. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press, 2013. xiv+233 pp. ISBN 9781107013483
Reviewed by
Published online: 23 June 2015
https://doi.org/10.1075/rcl.13.1.10zha
https://doi.org/10.1075/rcl.13.1.10zha
References (11)
Busse, U. (2002). Linguistic variation in the Shakespeare corpus: Morpho-syntactic variability of second person pronouns. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Hopper, P. J., & Traugott, E. C. (2003). Grammaticalization. 2nd edition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Kroch, A., Santorini, B., & Delfs, L. (2004). The Penn-Helsinki parsed corpus of Early Modern English. [URL]
Langacker, R. (1991). Foundations of cognitive grammar, vol. 2: Descriptive application. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
Nurmi, A., Taylor, A., Warner, A., Pintzuk, S., & Nevalainen, T. (2006). The parsed corpus of Early English correspondence, tagged version. Compiled by the CEEC project team. University of York and University of Helsinki. Distributed through the Oxford Text Archive.
Raumolin-Brunberg, H., & Nevalainen, T. (2007). From mine to my and thine to thy: The loss of the nasal in the first and second person possessives. In U. Smit, S. Dollinger, J. Hüttner, G. Kaltenböck, & U. Lutzky (eds.), Tracing English through time: Explorations in language variation (pp. 303–314). Vienna: Braumuller.
