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Genusresolution bei mittelhochdeutsch beide

BuchGebunden
320 Seiten
Englisch
Language Science Presserschienen am09.02.2024
Already Jacob Grimm noted in volume 2 of his Geschichte der deutschen Sprache (1848) that adjectival forms with reference to mixed-gender human groups often showed neuter agreement in the historical stages of German. Askedal (1973) as well dedicated an extensive study to this issue, based on critical editions of a handful of Old and Middle High German literary texts. Standard reference works on historical German grammar so far merely state the rule without further differentiation by grammatical context.This survey traces the phenomenon of gender resolution (Corbett 1983) in Middle High German. Evidence is collected on a true-to-manuscript basis consisting of the businesslike prose of the Corpus der altdeutschen Originalurkunden bis zum Jahr 1300 (Wilhelm et al 1932-2004) as well as the main manuscripts of all three recensions of the Kaiserchronik as a literary object of comparison, transcriptions of which have only in recent years been made available. The survey aims to validate existing knowledge on this grammatical phenomenon and to reflect on it in a modern grammar-theoretical framework. For this purpose, variation in the agreement form of Middle High German bÄide both´, which refers to a pair of antecedents, is evaluated systematically and in great detail in its typical use contexts with regard to morphological, semantic, and syntactic circumstances.mehr

Produkt

KlappentextAlready Jacob Grimm noted in volume 2 of his Geschichte der deutschen Sprache (1848) that adjectival forms with reference to mixed-gender human groups often showed neuter agreement in the historical stages of German. Askedal (1973) as well dedicated an extensive study to this issue, based on critical editions of a handful of Old and Middle High German literary texts. Standard reference works on historical German grammar so far merely state the rule without further differentiation by grammatical context.This survey traces the phenomenon of gender resolution (Corbett 1983) in Middle High German. Evidence is collected on a true-to-manuscript basis consisting of the businesslike prose of the Corpus der altdeutschen Originalurkunden bis zum Jahr 1300 (Wilhelm et al 1932-2004) as well as the main manuscripts of all three recensions of the Kaiserchronik as a literary object of comparison, transcriptions of which have only in recent years been made available. The survey aims to validate existing knowledge on this grammatical phenomenon and to reflect on it in a modern grammar-theoretical framework. For this purpose, variation in the agreement form of Middle High German bÄide both´, which refers to a pair of antecedents, is evaluated systematically and in great detail in its typical use contexts with regard to morphological, semantic, and syntactic circumstances.
Details
ISBN/GTIN978-3-98554-090-7
ProduktartBuch
EinbandartGebunden
Erscheinungsjahr2024
Erscheinungsdatum09.02.2024
Reihen-Nr.1
Seiten320 Seiten
SpracheEnglisch
MasseBreite 175 mm, Höhe 246 mm, Dicke 26 mm
Gewicht789 g
Artikel-Nr.61299121

Autor

Carsten Becker ist wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter am Institut für deutsche Sprache und Linguistik der Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. Er studierte deutsche und englische Literatur an der Philipps-Universität Marburg. Von 2017 bis 2022 war er wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter mit Schwerpunkt Sprachgeschichte im Projekt Handschriftencensus an der Philipps-Universität Marburg. Dort hat er 2022 seine Dissertationsschrift verteidigt, die hier in überarbeiteter Fassung vorliegt. Sein Forschungsinteresse gilt der historischen Morphosyntax und Dialektologie des Deutschen.Carsten Becker is a research assistant at the Department of German Studies and Linguistics at Humboldt University of Berlin. He studied German and English Literature at the University of Marburg. From 2017 to 2022 he was a research assistant at the Handschriftencensus project at the University of Marburg with a focus on historical linguistics. There he defended his doctoral thesis in 2022, the revised version of which is presented here. His research interest is in German historical morphosyntax and dialectology.