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Archive | 2002

Studies in the History of the English Language: A Millennial Perspective

Donka Minkova; Robert P. Stockwell

The 19 papers in this volume are a selection from a UCLA conference intended to take stock of the state of the field at the beginning of the new millenium and to stimulate research in English Historical Linguistics. The authors are predominantly U.S. scholars. The fields represented include morphosyntax and semantics, grammaticalization, discourse analysis, dialectology, lexicography, the diachronic study of code-switching, phonology and metrics. Two sample articles can be downloaded for free from our website.


Language | 1960

The Place of Intonation in a Generative Grammar of English

Robert P. Stockwell

1 Syntactic structures (1957), the Third Texas Conference on English (1958), and the Fourth Texas Conference on English (1959). 2 Manual of phonology (1955). 3 In symbolizing intonation morphemes I use the following conventions: 0 means any pitch phoneme, /1 2 3 4/. A plus sign means the last digit or any higher digit; e.g. 001+1 means /001/, /0021/, /0031/, or /0041/. A minus sign means the last digit or any lower digit.


Archive | 2003

English Vowel Shifts and ‘Optimal’ Diphthongs

Donka Minkova; Robert P. Stockwell

This paper is about four changes occurring on bimoraic peaks in English: nucleus-glide dissimilation, nucleus-glide assimilation, chain shift, and merger. Although in principle all bimoraic peaks are subject to the same perceptual and articulatory forces, the phonemicization of these forces as markedness constraints and their ranking with respect to each other and to faithfulness constraints, produces distinct results. Our account attempts to separate factors that are genuinely ‘functional’ in universal phonetic terms from what is attributable to conditions obtaining in the local system. We argue — and this we see as the main thrust of the paper — that these results can be independent of each other and should not be classified as the same unified historical phenomenon loosely referred to as shifts. The four changes are initiated by conflicting phonetic and phonological pressures that result in four distinct subtypes of phonological restructuring.


Language Sciences | 2002

Interpreting the Old and Middle English close vowels

Robert P. Stockwell; Donka Minkova

Abstract In a series of publications, including volumes two and three of the Cambridge History of the English Language, Roger Lass has advanced the view that the short vowels spelled and were phonetically [i], [u] in Old and Middle English, and that their modern values [ i ] and [ʊ] developed after the middle of the seventeenth century. This position forces him to propose a simultaneous lowering and lengthening rule for the Middle English short high vowels which undergo Open Syllable Lengthening. We argue that there are no obstacles to reconstructing [ i ] [ʊ] for Old English, that positing a simultaneous lowering and lengthening of the short high vowels in Middle English is an unnecessary contrivance, and that the lengthened [ i ] [ʊ] did not lower, but rather merged with the raised reflexes of ME [e:] and [o:].


Archive | 2009

English Words: Smaller than words: morphemes and types of morphemes

Donka Minkova; Robert P. Stockwell

The smallest meaningful units We think of words as being the most basic, the most fundamental, units through which meaning is represented in language. There is a sense in which this is true. Words are the smallest free-standing forms that represent meaning. Any word can be cited as an isolated item. It can serve as the headword in a dictionary list. It can be quoted. It can be combined with other words to form phrases and sentences. In general the word is the smallest unit that one thinks of as being basic to saying anything. It is the smallest unit of sentence composition and the smallest unit that we are aware of when we consciously try to create sentences. But actually there are even smaller units that carry the fundamental meanings of a language. Words are made up of these units. Consider just the unit gen inFigure 4.1. It is clearly not a free-standing word, but rather some kind of smaller unit which goes into the make-up, the composition, of words: These smaller units are called morphemes . Gen is a morpheme. It has a basic single meaning ‘birth’ which has split into two distinct, yet related and overlapping meanings, ‘birth, origin’ and ‘tribe, stock, nation, type.’ Looking at the words that appear under each of these meanings, one can readily see the difference. The meaning ‘origin’ is most easily seen on the middle branch below it, in words like genetic or genital .


Archive | 1973

The major syntactic structures of English

Robert P. Stockwell; Paul Schachter; Barbara H. Partee


Archive | 1965

The grammatical structures of English and Spanish

Robert P. Stockwell; J. Donald Bowen; John W. Martin


Archive | 1958

The Sounds of English and Spanish

Robert P. Stockwell; J. Donald Bowen; John W. Martin


Archive | 2001

English Words: History and Structure

Robert P. Stockwell; Donka Minkova


Archive | 2002

A millennial perspective

Donka Minkova; Robert P. Stockwell

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Donka Minkova

University of California

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Barbara H. Partee

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Karn King

University of California

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