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The Influence of Text Type on Word Order of Old Germanic Languages

A Corpus-Based Contrastive Study of Old English and Old High German

by Anna Cichosz (Author)
©2010 Thesis XVIII, 221 Pages

Summary

The book examines the word order of two Old Germanic languages, Old English and Old High German, using a corpus containing samples of three text types: poetry, original prose and translated prose. Thanks to this methodology, it is possible to compare word order patterns in Old English and Old High German, eliminating differences which may be due to stylistic or technical reasons (rhythm, rhyme, Latin influences), as well as to see to what extent text type determines word order and to check whether this phenomenon is universal (triggering similar behaviour in both analysed languages). The book also disproves the hypothesis of the West Germanic syntax, presenting data which show that the word order of the two languages started to diversify already during the Old English/High German period, i. e. before the 11th century AD.

Details

Pages
XVIII, 221
Year
2010
ISBN (Hardcover)
9783631613153
Language
English
Keywords
Old English word order Old High German word order West Germanic syntax hypothesis
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2010. XVIII, 221 pp., 14 fig., 112 tables

Biographical notes

Anna Cichosz (Author)

Anna Cichosz is a lecturer at the University of Łódź, where she completed her doctoral degree in 2009. Her research interests are focused on Old English and Old High German syntax, including the word order of Anglo-Saxon and early German poetry, prose and translations.

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Title: The Influence of Text Type on Word Order of Old Germanic Languages