Old Northumbrian Verbal Morphosyntax and the (Northern) Subject Rule

    Research output: Book/ReportBookAcademic

    Abstract

    This volume provides both a quantitative statistical and qualitative analysis of Late Northumbrian verbal morphosyntax as recorded in the Old English interlinear gloss to the Lindisfarne Gospels. It focuses in particular on the attestation of the subject type and adjacency constraints that characterise the so-called Northern Subject Rule concord system. The study presents new evidence which challenges the traditional Early Middle English dating attributed to the emergence of subject-type concord in the North of England and demonstrates that the syntactic configuration of the Northern Subject Rule was already a feature of Old English. By setting the Northumbrian developments within a broad framework of diachronic and diatopic variation, in which manifestations of subject-type concord are explored in a wide range of varieties of English, the author argues that a concord system based on subject type rather than person/number features is in fact a far less local and more universal tendency in English than previously believed.
    Original languageEnglish
    Place of PublicationAmsterdam
    PublisherJohn Benjamins
    Number of pages286
    ISBN (Electronic)978-90-272-6991-1
    ISBN (Print)978-90-272-4071-2
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2014

    Publication series

    NameNOWELE Supplement Series
    PublisherJohn Benjamins Publishing Company
    ISSN (Print)0900-8675

    Keywords

    • Northern Subject Rule, Old English, Old Northumbrian, Northern English, Historical Linguistics, levellin

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