Jacqueline Visconti
University of Genoa
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Bingley: Emerald Group Publishing; 2009. | 2009
Maj-Britt Mosegaard Hansen; Jacqueline Visconti
The focus of this volume is on semantic and pragmatic change, its causes and mechanisms. The papers gathered here offer both theoretical proposals of more general scope and in-depth studies of language-specific cases of meaning change in particular notional domains. The analyses include data from English, several Romance languages, German, Scandinavian languages, and Oceanic languages. Detailed case-studies covering central semantic domains, such as concession, evidentiality, intensification, modality, negation, scalarity, subjectivity, and temporality, allow the authors to test and refine current models of semantic change, by focusing, for instance, on the respective roles of speakers and hearers in the process and on the relationship between semantic and syntactic reanalysis. Key theoretical notions, such as presuppositions, paradigms, word order, and discourse status are revisited in a diachronic perspective to provide innovative accounts of causes and motivations for linguistic changes. A prominent theme is the evolution of procedural meanings of various kinds. Thus, several papers feature different types of pragmatic markers as their object of study, while others are concerned with items and constructions expressing modality, evidentiality, negation, and relational meanings. Closely related themes are: the interface between semantics and pragmatics/discourse, with figurative uses of language, rhetorical-argumentational strategies, discourse traditions, information structure, and the importance of dialogic contexts in change playing a salient role in several papers; the relationship between meaning change and processes such as grammaticalization, subjectification and pragmaticalization; and, the thorny issue of the categorization of linguistic items such as discourse markers or modal particles, evidentials or epistemic modals, to which the diachronic data are shown to contribute substantially. The volume will be of interest to graduate students and researchers in the fields of semantics, pragmatics, discourse analysis, grammaticalization, and historical linguistics.
Folia Linguistica | 2012
Maj-Britt Mosegaard Hansen; Jacqueline Visconti
This article examines similarities and differences in the evolution of both standard clause negation and n-word negation in French and Italian. The two languages differ saliently in the extent to which standard negation features postverbal markers. We suggest that a convergence of phonetic, prosodic, morphosyntactic, and pragmatic changes in the evolution of French may explain why the grammaticalization of the postverbal marker is significantly more advanced in that language. Two types of n-word negation must be considered: (i) those where the n-word occurs postverbally, and (ii) those where an n-word is positioned preverbally. In the former type, French allows deletion of the preverbal marker, whereas Italian does so to a much lesser extent. In the second type, French allows (indeed, normatively demands) insertion of a second preverbal negative marker, whereas Italian does not. We suggest that this is attributable to the respective positive vs negative etymologies of the n-words. In type (i) constructions, this etymological difference appears to make Italian a negative-concord language from the outset. In contrast, negative concord in Modern French has, to a large extent, developed gradually out of what was originally a reinforcement of standard negation by positive items with scalar properties. Our analysis suggests that the pace and form of grammaticalization cannot be attributed to any single cause, but is rather the result of a confluence of formal and functional factors.
Acta Linguistica Hafniensia | 2006
Jacqueline Visconti
Abstract The paper outlines the interaction of lexical and contextual factors in the evolution of a set of conditional and scalar expressions in Italian. Compositionality, intended diachronically as the property whereby the final stage of development of a particle can be predicted by the lexical meaning of its components, is argued to be an important and sometimes disregarded factor in language evolution. The advantages of a modular approach to grammar in capturing the division of labour between context and lexicon are evaluated in a diachronic pragmatics approach to language change.
In: 18th International Conference on Historical Linguistics; 06 Aug 2007-11 Aug 2007; Montreal, Canada. 2007. | 2007
Maj-Britt Mosegaard Hansen; Jacqueline Visconti
Journal of Pragmatics | 2009
Jacqueline Visconti
Archive | 2004
Jacqueline Visconti
Journal of Historical Pragmatics | 2005
Jacqueline Visconti
Language Sciences | 2013
Jacqueline Visconti
Journal of Pragmatics | 2009
Jacqueline Visconti
Language Sciences | 1996
Jacqueline Visconti