Case in Icelandic : A Synchronic, Diachronic and Comparative Approach
(2001) In Lundastudier i nordisk språkvetenskap. Serie A 57.- Abstract
- This dissertation addresses the question of what the function of morphological case is in Icelandic. The working hypotheses of this book is that morphological case is a multifunctional category. Firstly, new verbs in Icelandic were collected and examined to cast light on the productivity of the morphological cases, revealing that not only are the nominative and accusative productive in Icelandic but also the dative. Secondly, a text-based investigation was conducted to find out what the statistical correlation is between morphological case, syntactic functions and thematic roles. Thus, a well-stratified corpus was compiled, containing Modern Icelandic texts from five written genres and one spoken genre. The study showed that there is a... (More)
- This dissertation addresses the question of what the function of morphological case is in Icelandic. The working hypotheses of this book is that morphological case is a multifunctional category. Firstly, new verbs in Icelandic were collected and examined to cast light on the productivity of the morphological cases, revealing that not only are the nominative and accusative productive in Icelandic but also the dative. Secondly, a text-based investigation was conducted to find out what the statistical correlation is between morphological case, syntactic functions and thematic roles. Thus, a well-stratified corpus was compiled, containing Modern Icelandic texts from five written genres and one spoken genre. The study showed that there is a correlation between morphological case and both syntactic and semantic factors. Thirdly, a similar corpus was compiled for Old Icelandic, containing four genres which are closest in content to the Modern Icelandic genres. Some frequency differences were found between the two corpora, reflecting a change in the use of morphological case from Old to Modern Icelandic. Fourthly, a comparison of the development of case in English, Swedish and German revealed that the internal order of the changes within the case system is the same for the Germanic languages considered, with English leading the development, followed closely by Swedish, then German, and Icelandic lagging behind. The theoretical approach adopted in this work is that of Construction Grammar and the Usage-based model. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/20250
- author
- Barddal, Johanna LU
- supervisor
- opponent
-
- Dahl, Östen
- organization
- publishing date
- 2001
- type
- Thesis
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Scandinavian languages and literature, Development of th, Scandinavian Linguistics, Spoken vs. Written Icelandic, Usage-based Model, Construction Grammar, Borrowings, Neologism, Type Frequency, Productivity, Argument Structure, Thematic Roles, Syntactic functions, Icelandic, Morphological Case, Nordiska språk (språk och litteratur), Grammar, semantics, semiotics, syntax, Grammatik, semantik, semiotik, Linguistics, Lingvistik
- in
- Lundastudier i nordisk språkvetenskap. Serie A
- volume
- 57
- pages
- 279 pages
- publisher
- Scandinavian Languages
- defense location
- Sal Kock, Humanisthuset
- defense date
- 2001-09-22 10:15:00
- ISSN
- 0347-8971
- ISBN
- 91-628-4898-4
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- additional info
- The information about affiliations in this record was updated in December 2015. The record was previously connected to the following departments: Swedish (015011001)
- id
- a3681e0a-be84-470f-bef2-5b27b9c7d9ac (old id 20250)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-01 16:44:42
- date last changed
- 2019-05-22 06:47:27
@phdthesis{a3681e0a-be84-470f-bef2-5b27b9c7d9ac, abstract = {{This dissertation addresses the question of what the function of morphological case is in Icelandic. The working hypotheses of this book is that morphological case is a multifunctional category. Firstly, new verbs in Icelandic were collected and examined to cast light on the productivity of the morphological cases, revealing that not only are the nominative and accusative productive in Icelandic but also the dative. Secondly, a text-based investigation was conducted to find out what the statistical correlation is between morphological case, syntactic functions and thematic roles. Thus, a well-stratified corpus was compiled, containing Modern Icelandic texts from five written genres and one spoken genre. The study showed that there is a correlation between morphological case and both syntactic and semantic factors. Thirdly, a similar corpus was compiled for Old Icelandic, containing four genres which are closest in content to the Modern Icelandic genres. Some frequency differences were found between the two corpora, reflecting a change in the use of morphological case from Old to Modern Icelandic. Fourthly, a comparison of the development of case in English, Swedish and German revealed that the internal order of the changes within the case system is the same for the Germanic languages considered, with English leading the development, followed closely by Swedish, then German, and Icelandic lagging behind. The theoretical approach adopted in this work is that of Construction Grammar and the Usage-based model.}}, author = {{Barddal, Johanna}}, isbn = {{91-628-4898-4}}, issn = {{0347-8971}}, keywords = {{Scandinavian languages and literature; Development of th; Scandinavian Linguistics; Spoken vs. Written Icelandic; Usage-based Model; Construction Grammar; Borrowings; Neologism; Type Frequency; Productivity; Argument Structure; Thematic Roles; Syntactic functions; Icelandic; Morphological Case; Nordiska språk (språk och litteratur); Grammar; semantics; semiotics; syntax; Grammatik; semantik; semiotik; Linguistics; Lingvistik}}, language = {{eng}}, publisher = {{Scandinavian Languages}}, school = {{Lund University}}, series = {{Lundastudier i nordisk språkvetenskap. Serie A}}, title = {{Case in Icelandic : A Synchronic, Diachronic and Comparative Approach}}, volume = {{57}}, year = {{2001}}, }