This book details the development of eleven modal auxiliaries in late 18th- and 19th-century Canadian English in a framework of new-dialect formation. The study assesses features of the modal auxiliaries, tracing influences to British and American input varieties, parallel developments, or Canadian innovations. The findings are based on the Corpus of Early Ontario English, pre-Confederation Section, the first electronic corpus of early Canadian English. The data, which are drawn from newspapers, diaries and letters, include original transcriptions from manuscript sources and texts from semi-literate writers. While the overall results are generally coherent with new-dialect formation theory, the Ontarian context suggests a number of adaptations to the current model. In addition to its general Late Modern English focus, New-Dialect Formation in Canada traces changes in epistemic modal functions up to the present day, offering answers to the loss of root uses in the central modals. By comparing Canadian with British and American data, important theoretical insights on the origins of the variety are gained. The study offers a sociohistorical perspective on a still understudied variety of North American English by combining language-internal features with settlement history in this first monograph-length, diachronic treatment of Canadian English in real time.
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1. List of maps; 2. List of figures; 3. List of tables; 4. About this book; 5. Acknowledgements; 6. Abbreviations; 7. 1. Introduction; 8. 2. Canadian English: A research history of the 'other' variety of North American English; 9. 3. Ontario 1776-1850: An external language history; 10. 4. The Corpus of Early Ontario English, pre-Confederation Section (CONTE-pC); 11. 5. New-dialect formation in early Ontario; 12. 6. Late Modern English modal auxiliaries: Methodological considerations; 13. 7. Can (could) vs. May (might); 14. 8. Must vs. Have to; 15. 9. Shall vs. Will; 16. 10. Should, would and ought to; 17. 11. Conclusion; 18. 12. Appendices; 19. Bibliography; 20. General index
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[T]his book fills a conspicuous void in the field: namely a diachronic study of the formation of Canadian English [and] seems to settle the American English versus British English debate once and for all. The empirical analyses provide valuable additions to the study of modality in English as well as to the study of ongoing grammaticalization. [...] Overall, this book is a welcome and important contribution to Canadian English studies and, more broadly, to the study of dialect formation and dialect contact.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9789027231086
Publisert
2008-01-15
Utgiver
Vendor
John Benjamins Publishing Co
Vekt
830 gr
Høyde
245 mm
Bredde
164 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet

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