Abstract
Several linguistic traditions have yielded important insights into syntactic change: these include historical linguists (e.g. Meillet 1967), historical dialectologists (e.g. Fisiak 1988), theoretically-informed dialect syntax (e.g. Henry 1995), and variationists (e.g. Labov 1969). We advocate an approach that draws strategically from the principles and techniques of these practices in order to refine the method for probing syntactic change, to employ vernacular speech as syntactic data, and to understand syntactic change in terms of structure as well as social and discourse context. We demonstrate how different perspectives provide essential and complementary contributions to understanding linguistic change. We use a case study of a linguistic feature that has been undergoing syntactic change through obsolescence in the variety of English spoken in York, England: the non- standard use of a zero form with singular count nouns (e.g. They used to follow Ø river) which we refer to as a ‘zero definite article’. The path from the emergence of a syntactic feature towards its demise is typically a protracted development. Historical (corpus) linguistics can trace the first attestations of a feature and its earlier meanings, historical dialectology its geographical distribution, and theoretically-informed research on dialect syntax can circumscribe its syntactic structure. We highlight the additional benefit of a variationist sociolinguistics approach, which focusses on community-based samples of spoken vernacular language data and quantitative methods. For example, in this case study we can document the last vestiges of the zero definite article in a conservative dialect and capture grammatical changes in the process of loss by comparing older to younger generations of speakers.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 7 |
Pages (from-to) | 1-22 |
Number of pages | 22 |
Journal | Journal of Historical Syntax |
Volume | 7 |
Issue number | 6-19 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 27 Sept 2023 |
Bibliographical note
Funding Information:The first author gratefully acknowledges the Economic and Social Science Research Council of the United Kingdom 1995-2003, the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) 2001-present and the Canada Research Chairs program (CRC). We thank Joan Beal for her knowledge of northern English. The study responds to the central objective of the workshop Syntactic Change in Progress (19 May 2021, Universität Konstanz): “to stimulate dialogue and explore points of convergence and divergence between … different approaches [to syntactic change]”. http://walkden.space/DiGS2021/workshop.html.
Funding Information:
∗ The first author gratefully acknowledges the Economic and Social Science Research Council of the United Kingdom 1995-2003, the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) 2001-present and the Canada Research Chairs program (CRC). We thank Joan Beal for her knowledge of northern English. The study responds to the central objective of the workshop Syntactic Change in Progress (19 May 2021, Universität Konstanz): “to stimulate dialogue and explore points of convergence and divergence between … different approaches [to syntactic change]”. http://walkden.space/DiGS2021/workshop.html.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Tagliamonte & Rupp.
Keywords
- syntactic change
- zero article
- York
- English