Read more
The Volume contains written versions of some contributions to the Fifth International Conference on Middle English (ICOME 5), held at the University of Naples in 2005. Most of the papers concentrate on individual aspects of grammar and semantics, although some focus on dialectal fragmentation, and others adopt a pragmatic perspective. There is still a lot to be done in the study of the Middle English lexicon, in the same way as there are many aspects of grammar that have not been fully studied yet. The volume aims at providing contributions that can further the knowledge of these subfields of English historical linguistics, through state-of-the-art case studies that also exploit all modern resources such as computerised corpora and electronically tagged texts.
List of contents
Contents: Gabriella Mazzon: Introduction - Hans-Jürgen Diller: From m d to emotion (or almost): the medieval gestation of a modern concept - Dieter Kastovsky: Middle English word-formation: a list of desiderata - Laura Wright: On some Middle English Colour Terms, including pink - Barbara Bianchi: Towards an electronic LALME: Scandinavian and French influence in some late Middle English texts from Cheshire - María José Carrillo-Linares/Edurne Garrido-Anes: Middle English Lexical Distributions: Two Instances From The Lay Folks' Catechism - Gabriella Del Lungo Camiciotti: A pragma-linguistic approach to medieval narrative: the case of saints' lives - Julia Fernández Cuesta/Nieves Rodríguez Ledesma: From Old Northumbrian to Northern Middle English: Bridging the divide - Nils-Lennart Johannesson: On Orm's relationship to his Latin sources - Cynthia Lloyd: From denominal to deverbal: the suffix -age in Middle English - María José López-Couso: Frequency effects: Middle English nis as a case in point - Roderick W. McConchie: Discomfort in Middle English - Belén Méndez Naya: He nas nat right fat: On the origin and development of intensifier right - Lilo Moessner: The Mandative Subjunctive in Middle English - Tibor Örsi: The Use of Synonyms in the English Version of Mandeville's Travels - Letizia Vezzosi: Himself: an overview of its use in Middle English - Jerzy Welna: The loss of the liquid [l] in Early English, or what Luick and Jordan did not say - Anna Wojtys: Middle English perfixal past participle marking in the Midlands.