References (80)
References
Ashby, William J. 1977. Clitic Inflection in French: An Historical Perspective. Amsterdam: Rodopi.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
1981. The Loss of the negative particle ne in French: A Syntactic change in progress. Language 57: 674–687. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
1991. When does variation indicate linguistic change in progress. Journal of French Language Studies 1(1): 1–19. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Ayres-Bennett, Wendy. 1994. Negative evidence: Or another look at the non-use of negative ne in seventeenth-century French. French Studies 48: 63–85. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Bell, Alan. 1981. Language style as audience design. Language in Society 13: 145–204. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Blanche-Benveniste, Claire. 1985. Coexistence de deux usages de la syntaxe du français parlé. In Contacts de langues: Discours oral, Jean-Claude Bouvier. (ed.), 201–214. Aix-en-Provence: Université de Provence.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Blanche-Benveniste, Claire & Jeanjean, Colette. 1987. Le Français parlé: Transcription et édition. Paris: Didier Erudition.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Chambers, Jack K. & Trudgill, Peter. 1980. Dialectology. Cambridge: CUP.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Coveney, Aidan. 1996. Variability in Spoken French: A Sociolinguistic Study of Interrogation and Negation. Exeter: Elm Bank.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Du Bois, John W., Schuetze-Coburn, Stephen. Paolino, Danae & Cumming, Susanna. 1993. Discourse Transcription [Santa Barbara Papers in Linguistics 4]. Santa Barbara CA: Department of Linguistics, University of California.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Givón, Talmy. 1976. Topic, pronoun, and grammatical agreement. In Subject and Topic, Charles N. Li. (ed), 149–188. New York’NY: Academic Press.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Krassin, Gudrun. 1994. Neuere Entwicklungen in der französischen Grammatik und Grammatikforschung [Romanistische Arbeitshefte 38]. Tübingen: Max Niemeyer. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Labov, William. 1972. Sociolinguistic Patterns. Philadelphia PA: University of Pennsylvania Press.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. 1994. Principles of Linguistic Change: Internal Factors. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Lodge, R. Anthony. 1993. French: From Dialect to Standard. London: Routledge. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Lüdicke, Annemarie. 1982. Zum Ausfall des Verneinungspartikel `ne’ im gesprochen Französisch. Zeitschrift für romanische Philologie 98: 43–57.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Pohl, Jacques. 1968. Ne dans le français parlé contemporain: Les modalités de son abandon. In Actas: [Madrid, 1965] XI Congreso Internacional de Lingüística y Filología Románicas, t. 3, Antonio Quilles, Ramón Carril & Margarita Cantarero. (eds), 1343–1358. Madrid: Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. 1975. L’omission de ne dans le français parlé contemporain. Le Français dans le monde 111: 17–23.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Posner, Rebecca. 1985. Post-verbal negation in non-standard French: A historical and comparative view. Romance Philology 39: 170–197.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. 1997. Linguistic Change in French. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Rand, David & Sankoff, David. 1990. GoldVarb 2.0 (software and documentation obtained directly from the authors). Montréal: Université de Montréal.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Sankoff, Gillian & Vincent, Diane. 1977. L’emploi productif de ne dans le français parlé à Montréal. Le Français Moderne 45: 243–256.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. 1980. The productive use of ne in Montreal French. In The Social Life of Language, Gillian Sankoff & Diane Vincent. (eds), 295–310. Philadelphia PA: University of Pennsylvania Press. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Sturm, Joachim. 1981. Morpho-syntaktische Untersuchungen zur `phrase négative’ im gesprochenen Französich. Die Verneinung mit und ohne `NE’. Frankfurt: Peter Lang.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Editor’s references
Ashby, William J. 1973. The rise of prefixed inflection in French. Ann Arbor: Univ. of Michigan, Ph.D. diss.
1976/This volume. The loss of the negative morpheme, ne, in Parisian French. Lingua, 39:119–137. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
1977. Clitic Inflection in French: An Historical Perspective. Amsterdam: Rodopi.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
1980/This volume. Prefixed conjugation in Parisian French. In Italic and Romance Linguistic Studies in Honor of Ernst Pulgram [Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 18], Herbert J. Izzo (ed.), 195–207. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
1988/ This volume. The syntax, pragmatics, and sociolinguistics of left- and right-dislocations in French. Lingua 75:203–229. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
2001. Un nouveau regard sur la chute du ne en français parlé tourangeau: s’agit-il d’un changement en cours? Journal of French Language Studies 11: 1–22. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Auger, Julie. 1993. More evidence for verbal agreement marking in colloquial French. In Linguistic Perspectives on the Romance Languages [Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 103], William J. Ashby, Marianne Mithun, Giorgio Perissinotto & Eduardo Raposo. (eds), 177–198. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. 1994. Pronominal Clitics in Quebec Colloquial French: A Morphological Analysis. PhD dissertation, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
Auger, Julie & Villeneuve, Anne-José. 2008. Ne deletion in Picard and in regional French: Evidence for distinct grammars. In Social Lives in Language – Sociolinguistics and multilingual Speech Communities: Celebrating the Work of Gillian Sankoff [IMPACT: Studies in Language, Culture and Society 24], Miriam Meyerhoff & Naomi Nagy. (eds), 223–247. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Berman, Ruth A., Slobin, Dan I., Aksu-Koç, Ayhan A., Bamberg, Michael, Dasinger, Lisa, Marchman, Virginia, Neeman, Yonni, Rodkin, Philip C., Sebastián, Eugenia, et al.. 1994. Relating Events in Narrative: A Crosslinguistic Developmental Study. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Blanche-Benveniste, Claire & Jeanjean, Collette. 1987. Le Français parlé: Transcription et édition. Paris: Didier.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Blattner, Géraldine & Williams, Lawrence. 2011. L’emploi variable du ne dans le discours électronique synchrone: une étude variationniste en temps apparent. Langage & société 138: 109–129. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Bybee, Joan. 2015. Bybee, Joan L. 2015. Language Change [Cambridge Textbooks in Linguistics]. Cambridge: CUP. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Cheshire, Jenny. 1999. Spoken Standard English. London: Routledge.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. 2013. Grammaticalisation in social context: The emergence of a new English pronoun. Journal of Sociolinguistics 17: 608–633. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Chomsky, Noam. 1981/1993. Lectures on Government and Binding: The Pisa Lectures. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Culbertson, Jennifer. 2010. Convergent evidence for categorial change in French: From subject clitic to agreement marker. Language 86(1): 85–132. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Culbertson, Jennifer & Legendre, Géraldine. 2014. Prefixal agreement and impersonal ‘il’ in Spoken French: Experimental evidence. Journal of French Language Studies 24: 83–105. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
De Cat, Cécile. 2007. French Dislocation: Interpretation, Syntax, Acquisition. Oxford: OUP.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Donaldson, Bryan. 2017. Negation in near-native French: Variation and sociolinguistic competence. Language Learning 67(1): 141–170. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Dugua, Céline & Baude, Olivier. 2017. La liaison à Orléans, corpus et changement linguistique: Une première étude exploratoire. Journal of French Language Studies 27(1): 41–54. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Fonseca-Greber, Bonnibeth Beale. 2000. The Change from Pronoun to Clitic to Prefix and the Rise of Null Subjects in Spoken Swiss French. PhD dissertation, University of Arizona.
Fonseca-Greber, Bonnie B. (2005). Zero marking in French impersonal verbs: A counter trend to clitic morphologization? In Proceedings of the Thirtieth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistic Society, Marc Ettlinger, Nicholas Fleisher & Mischa Park-Doob (eds), 81–92. Berkeley: Berkeley Linguistics Society.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Fonseca-Greber, Bonnibeth B. 2007. The emergence of emphatic ne in conversational Swiss French. Journal of French Language Studies 17(3): 249–275. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Fonseca-Greber, Bonnie B. 2009. The overt pronoun constraint in conversational Swiss French: Implications for classroom learners. The French Review 82(4): 802–820.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
2017. Discourse-pragmatic change and emphatic negation in Spoken French: Or coming full circle. In The Pragmatics of Negation: Negative Meanings, Uses and Discursive Functions [Pragmatics and Beyond New Series 283], Malin Roitman. (ed.), 123–146. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Fonseca-Greber, Bonnie & Waugh, Linda R. 2003a. On the radical difference between the subject personal pronouns in written and spoken European French. In Corpus Analysis: 16 Language Structure and Language Use [Language and Computers: Studies in Practical Linguistics 46], Pepi Leistyna & Charles F. Meyer (eds), 225–240. Amsterdam: Rodopi.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
2003b. The subject clitics of Conversational European French: Morphologization, grammatical change, semantic change, and change in progress. In A Romance Perspective on Linguistic Knowledge and Use [Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 238], Rafael Núñez-Cedeño, Luis López & Richard Cameron. (eds), 99–117. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Fuβ, Eric. 2005. The Rise of Agreement: A Formal Approach to the Syntax and Grammaticalization of Verbal Inflection [Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today 81]. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
van Gelderen, Elly. 2004. Grammaticalization as Economy [Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today 71]. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. (ed.). 2009. Cyclical Change [Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today 146]. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. 2011. The Linguistic Cycle. Oxford: OUP. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. (ed). 2016. Cyclical Change Continued. [Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today 227]. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Hansen, Anita Berit & Malderez, Isabelle. 2004. Le ne de négation en région parisienne: Une étude en temps réel. Langage et Société 107(1): 5–30. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Hansen, Maj-Britt Mosegaard. 2011. Negative Cycles and Grammaticalization. In The Oxford Handbook of Grammaticalization, Heiko Narrog & Bernd Heine. (eds), 570–579. Oxford: OUP.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Jakubowicz, Célia & Rigaut, Catherine. 1997. L’acquisition des clitiques nominatifs en français. In Les Pronoms: Morphologie. syntaxe et typologie, Anne Zribi-Hertz. (ed.), 57–99. Saint-Denis: Presses Universitaires Vincennes.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Kayne, Richard S. 1975. French Syntax: The Transformational Cycle. Cambridge MA: The MIT Press.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Klausenburger, Jurgen. 2000. Grammaticalization: Studies in Latin and Romance Morphosyntax. [Current Issues in Linguistic Theory 193]. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Martineau, France & Mougeon, Raymond. 2003. A sociolinguistic study of the origins of ne deletion in European and Quebec French. Language 79(1): 118–152. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Meisner, Charlotte & Pomino, Natascha. 2014. Synchronic variation in the expression of French negation: A Distributed Morphology approach. Journal of French Language Studies 24(1): 9–28. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Pierce, Amy E. 1992. Language Acquisition and Syntactic Theory. Dordrecht: Kluwer. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Poplack, Shana & St. Amand, Anne. 2007. A real-time windown on 19th-century vernacular French: The Récits du français québécois d’autrefois. Language in Society 36: 707–734. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Rizzi, Luigi. 1986. On the status of subject clitics in Romance. In Studies in Romance Linguistics, Osvaldo Jaeggli & Carmen Silva-Corvalan (eds), 391–419. Dordrecht: Foris. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Roberge, Yves. 1986. Subject Doubling, Free Inversion, and Null Argument Languages. Canadian Journal of Linguistics 31:55–79. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. 1990. The Syntactic Recoverability of Null Arguments. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Roitman, Malin & Fonseca-Greber, Bonnie. 2022, to appear. Negative campaigning: Communicating negative meanings in French presidential debates. In Negative Meanings: Social Settings and Pragmatic Effects:Using Negatives in Political Discourse, Social Media, and Oral Interaction, Malin Roitman. (ed.), ___. Stockholm: Stockholm University Press.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Sankoff, Gillian & Vincent, Dianne. 1977. L’emploi productif du ne dans le français parlé à Montréal. Le Français Moderne 45.243–56.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Sankoff, Gillian & Vincent, Diane. 1980. The productive use of ne in Montreal French. In The Social Life of Language, Gillian Sankoff & Diane Vincent. (eds), 295–310. Philadelphia PA: University of Pennsylvania Press. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Schwegler, A. 1990. Analyticity and Syntheticity: A Diachronic Perspective with Special Reference to Romance Languages. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Schwenter, Scott A. 2006. Fine-tuning Jespersen’s Cycle. In Drawing the Boundaries of Meaning: Neo-Gricean Studies in Pragmatics and Semantics in honor of Laurence R. Horn [Studies in Language Campanion Series 80], Betty J. Birner & Gregory Ward. (eds), 327–344. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Stark, Elisabeth, Meisner, Charlotte & Völker, Harald. (eds). 2014. Negation and Clitics in French: Interaction and Variation. Special issue of Journal of French Language Studies 24(1).Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
van Compernolle, Rémi. 2009. Emphatic ne in informal spoken French and implications for foreign language pedagogy. International Journal of Applied Linguistics 19(1): 47–65. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
. 2010. The (slightly more) productive use of ne in Montreal French chat. Language Sciences 32(4): 447–463. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Zimmermann, Michael & Kaiser, Georg A. 2014. On expletive subject pronoun drop in Colloquial French. Journal of French Language Studies, 24, 107–126. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Zribi-Hertz, Anne. 1994. ‘La syntaxe des clitiques nominatifs en français standard et en français avancé’, Travaux de linguistique et de philologie XXXII: 131–147.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Cited by (1)

Cited by one other publication

Ashby, William J. & Bonnie B. Fonseca-Greber

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 4 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.

Mobile Menu Logo with link to supplementary files background Layer 1 prag Twitter_Logo_Blue