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Stylistic Fronting in corpora

Sigurðsson, Halldor Armann LU (2017) In Studies in Germanic Linguistics 1. p.307-338
Abstract
Stylistic Fronting (SF) is a process that fronts various types of non-subjects to the preverbal position in subjectless clauses (“that gone have”, etc.). With the exception of Icelandic and to some extent Faroese, SF has disappeared from Scandinavian varieties. It is commonly assumed that even in Icelandic it is formal and old fashioned, indicating that it might be on its way out of this language as well. However, this has not been substantiated or supported by frequency surveys in large written language corpora. This paper studies the distribution and frequency of Stylistic Fronting in two such corpora, Timarit.is and the World Wide Web, across two distinct SF domains: Subject relatives and subjectless impersonal (mostly adverbial)... (More)
Stylistic Fronting (SF) is a process that fronts various types of non-subjects to the preverbal position in subjectless clauses (“that gone have”, etc.). With the exception of Icelandic and to some extent Faroese, SF has disappeared from Scandinavian varieties. It is commonly assumed that even in Icelandic it is formal and old fashioned, indicating that it might be on its way out of this language as well. However, this has not been substantiated or supported by frequency surveys in large written language corpora. This paper studies the distribution and frequency of Stylistic Fronting in two such corpora, Timarit.is and the World Wide Web, across two distinct SF domains: Subject relatives and subjectless impersonal (mostly adverbial) clauses. The survey yields support to the common assumption that SF is on the retreat. In relative clauses verb-initial order (V1) seems to be on the increase at the expense of SF, whereas it is expletive það ‘there, it’ insertion that is on the increase in impersonal clauses. Nevertheless, the survey also highlights that both these changes proceed slowly. SF still has a strong foothold in everyday written Icelandic, in particular in certain impersonal clause types. Also V1 is quite natural in some impersonal clauses, suggesting that filling the left edge of CP is not a strict syntactic requirement but rather an externalization or performance target, a commonly desirable PF goal, as it were. An extra methodological result of the study is that it shows that Google Search may well be (carefully) used as a research tool in linguistics – no small an advantage. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
word order frequencies, verb-initial adverbial clauses, Timarit.is, relative clauses, Stylistic Fronting, impersonal clauses, Google Search, Extended Projection Principle, expletive insertion
host publication
Syntactic Variation in Insular Scandinavian
series title
Studies in Germanic Linguistics
editor
Thráinsson, Höskuldur ; Heycock, Caroline ; Petersen, Hjalmar P. and Hansen, Zakaris Svabo
volume
1
pages
307 - 338
publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
ISSN
2452-2120
ISBN
9789027265593
9789027208569
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
2179158c-68c4-48fc-977a-f39a4ccaea38 (old id 8500062)
alternative location
https://ling.auf.net/lingbuzz/002635
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 11:07:45
date last changed
2018-11-21 21:02:51
@inbook{2179158c-68c4-48fc-977a-f39a4ccaea38,
  abstract     = {{Stylistic Fronting (SF) is a process that fronts various types of non-subjects to the preverbal position in subjectless clauses (“that gone have”, etc.). With the exception of Icelandic and to some extent Faroese, SF has disappeared from Scandinavian varieties. It is commonly assumed that even in Icelandic it is formal and old fashioned, indicating that it might be on its way out of this language as well. However, this has not been substantiated or supported by frequency surveys in large written language corpora. This paper studies the distribution and frequency of Stylistic Fronting in two such corpora, Timarit.is and the World Wide Web, across two distinct SF domains: Subject relatives and subjectless impersonal (mostly adverbial) clauses. The survey yields support to the common assumption that SF is on the retreat. In relative clauses verb-initial order (V1) seems to be on the increase at the expense of SF, whereas it is expletive það ‘there, it’ insertion that is on the increase in impersonal clauses. Nevertheless, the survey also highlights that both these changes proceed slowly. SF still has a strong foothold in everyday written Icelandic, in particular in certain impersonal clause types. Also V1 is quite natural in some impersonal clauses, suggesting that filling the left edge of CP is not a strict syntactic requirement but rather an externalization or performance target, a commonly desirable PF goal, as it were. An extra methodological result of the study is that it shows that Google Search may well be (carefully) used as a research tool in linguistics – no small an advantage.}},
  author       = {{Sigurðsson, Halldor Armann}},
  booktitle    = {{Syntactic Variation in Insular Scandinavian}},
  editor       = {{Thráinsson, Höskuldur and Heycock, Caroline and Petersen, Hjalmar P. and Hansen, Zakaris Svabo}},
  isbn         = {{9789027265593}},
  issn         = {{2452-2120}},
  keywords     = {{word order frequencies; verb-initial adverbial clauses; Timarit.is; relative clauses; Stylistic Fronting; impersonal clauses; Google Search; Extended Projection Principle; expletive insertion}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{307--338}},
  publisher    = {{John Benjamins Publishing Company}},
  series       = {{Studies in Germanic Linguistics}},
  title        = {{Stylistic Fronting in corpora}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/29907106/Stylistic_Fronting_in_corpora_revised3.pdf}},
  volume       = {{1}},
  year         = {{2017}},
}