1. Order out of chaos? The English gender change in the Southwest Midlands as a process of semantically based reorganization
- Author
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Merja Stenroos
- Subjects
Linguistics and Language ,Hierarchy ,History ,Continuum (measurement) ,Process (engineering) ,Language and Linguistics ,Linguistics ,Order (exchange) ,Noun ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Individuation ,Period (music) ,Confusion - Abstract
The article presents a study of the process of gender change in the thirteenth-century Southwest Midlands, based on twenty texts localized in this area. The assumption is that a study limited to a single text community would give a better view of the patterns of change than studies spanning a wide chronological and/or geographical range. It is suggested that the system of pronominal gender assignment went through a process of semantically based reorganization during this period, and that the resulting patterns are most usefully described using the model of a hierarchy or continuum of individuation (Dahl 1999a: 99; Siemund 2008: 140). The gender assignment of individual nouns is found to be remarkably regular, and the material seems to give no reason to assume a period of confusion between the Old and postmedieval English systems of gender assignment.
- Published
- 2008
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