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Browsing by Subject "Agentivity"

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    (Anti-)Grammaticalization paths of Spanish venir ‘to come’ + past participle
    (De Gruyter, 2024-07-22) Bravo, Ana; Lengua Española y Lingüística General
    Spanish venir ‘to come’ + past participle (pp) has different meanings as outcomes, namely arrangement (viene envuelto lit. ‘comes wrapped’) and causation (viene causado lit. ‘comes caused’). Furthermore, and contrary to Italian venire + pp and, to a lesser extent, Romanian veni + pp, it lacks the passive auxiliary function. In this article we explain these two meanings in compositional terms and show that only the latter can be properly considered a new grammaticalization path, in that the former venir is a lexical verb and as such allows the very same range of meanings and combinations in Medieval Spanish that it allows today. In addition, we argue that venir + pp might be analyzed as an impersonal construction. Finally, our findings support previous research on the grammaticalization of COME as a passive auxiliary, according to which it develops out of an intermediate COME with a change of state meaning. In Spanish this in-between state occurred, but only in an extremely restricted way and it didn’t go beyond the 13th century.
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    Persona Management and Identity Projection in English Medieval Society: Evidence from John Paston II
    (De Gruyter, 2018-03-30) Hernández-Campoy, Juan M.; García-Vidal, Tamara; Filología Inglesa
    Historical Sociolinguistics has favoured the interest in tracing heterogeneity and vernacularity in the history of language, reconstructing the sociolinguistic contexts and directions of language change as well as socially-based variation patterns in remote speech communities. But this treatment of language variation and change macroscopically, longitudinally, unidimensionally and focused on the speech community as a macro-cosmos can be revealingly complemented with other views microscopically, cross-sectionally, multidimensionally and privileging individual and their community of practice as a micro-cosmos. This conveys a shift from the study of collectivity and inter speaker variation to that of individuality, intra-speaker variation and authenticity. The aim of this paper is to show results on the microscopic investigation of the mechanisms and motivations for style-shifting within the micro-cosmos of late Medieval England applying current multidimensional models of intra-speaker variation as persona management to historical corpora of written correspondence. The study is carried out through the analysis of the behaviour of the orthographic variable (TH) in members of the Paston family from the Paston Letters. The data obtained show that letters may shed light onto the motivation(s) for variability in individuals and their stylistic choices for the construction of identity, in addition to tracing language change. This would therefore provide us with the possibility of reconstructing the sociolinguistic values in medieval times, and of accounting for the social meaning of inter- and intra- speaker variation in the sociolinguistic behaviour of speakers at the individual level as a resource for identity construction, representation, and even social positioning in interpersonal communication

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