The genitive case in Dutch and German : a study of morphosyntactic change in codified languages

Author(s)

    • Scott, Alan (Alan K.)

Bibliographic Information

The genitive case in Dutch and German : a study of morphosyntactic change in codified languages

by Alan K. Scott

(Brill's studies in historical linguistics / series editor, Jóhanna Barðdal ; consulting editor, Spike Gildea, v. 2)

Brill, c2014

  • Hb

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (pages 355-378) and index

Contents of Works

  • Morphosyntactic change
  • The genitive case
  • Data and methodology
  • The Dutch genitive
  • The German genitive
  • Codification and morphosyntactic change
  • Conclusions and closing remarks

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In The Genitive Case in Dutch and German: A Study of Morphosyntactic Change in Codified Languages, Alan K. Scott offers an account of the tension that exists between morphosyntactic change and codification, focusing on the effect that codification has had on the genitive case and alternative constructions in both languages. On the basis of usage data from a wide variety of registers, from the 16th century to the present day, Alan K. Scott demonstrates that codification has preserved obsolescent morphological genitive constructions in Dutch and German while suppressing their potential replacements, and shows that, despite its association with norm-conformant language, the genitive is used to a surprisingly large extent in informal early modern Dutch and modern German sources.

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