Article published In: On multiple source constructions in language change
Edited by Hendrik De Smet, Lobke Ghesquière and Freek Van de Velde
[Studies in Language 37:3] 2013
► pp. 599–644
Sources of auxiliation in the perfects of Europe
Published online: 7 October 2013
https://doi.org/10.1075/sl.37.3.06dri
https://doi.org/10.1075/sl.37.3.06dri
This paper explores the complex role of language contact in the development of be and have auxiliation in the periphrastic perfects of Europe. Beginning with the influence of Ancient Greek on Latin, it traces the spread of the category across western Europe and identifies the Carolingian scribal tradition as largely responsible for extending the use of the be perfect alongside the have perfect across Charlemagne’s realm. Outside that territory, by contrast, in “peripheral” areas like Iberia, Southern Italy, and England, have came to be used as the only perfect auxiliary. Within the innovating core area, a further innovation began in Paris in the 12th century and spread to contiguous areas in France, Southern Germany, and northern Italy: the semantic shift in the perfects from anterior to preterital meaning. What can be concluded from these three successive instances of diffusion in the history of the perfect is that contact should be regarded as one of the essential “multiple sources” of innovation, and as a fundamental explanatory mechanism for language change.
Cited by (11)
Cited by 11 other publications
Gisborne, Nikolas
Eide, Kristin Melum & Marc Fryd
2021. The perfect volume. In The Perfect Volume [Studies in Language Companion Series, 217], ► pp. 1 ff.
De Smet, Isabeau & Freek Van de Velde
Bjørnflaten, Jan Ivar
2019. Reanalysis in the Russian past tense. In Perspectives on Language Structure and Language Change [Current Issues in Linguistic Theory, 345], ► pp. 253 ff.
Colleran, Rebecca
2019. Leveraging grammaticalization. In Developments in English Historical Morpho-syntax [Current Issues in Linguistic Theory, 346], ► pp. 77 ff.
Cornillie, Bert & Bridget Drinka
2019. Latin influence on the syntax of the languages of Europe. Belgian Journal of Linguistics 33 ► pp. 1 ff.
Durrell, Martin
2018. Melitta Gillmann: Perfektkonstruktionen mit ›haben‹ und ›sein‹. Eine Korpusuntersuchung im Althochdeutschen, Altsächsischen und Neuhochdeutschen, Berlin and Boston: de Gruyter 2015, XV, 333 pp., 52 fig. (Studia Linguistica Germanica 128). Beiträge zur Geschichte der deutschen Sprache und Literatur 140:4 ► pp. 505 ff.
Gregersen, Frans, Elisabet Engdahl & Anu Laanemets
van der Auwera, Johan & Daniël Van Olmen
[no author supplied]
[no author supplied]
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 3 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.
