An Historical Syntax of the English Language, 3. köideBrill Archive, 1963 |
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Page ix
... 39 ' Me is liefer ' , ' I had liefer ' , ' I am liefer ' , etc. § 40 • • · • • V xxiii 44556 ་ ་ 7 7 7 8 8 9 9 ΙΟ ΙΟ ΙΟ II 13 14 14 · 15 15 18 19 20 20 23 • 24 25 26 • • 29 31 • • 32 ' Me were better ' , ' I were better.
... 39 ' Me is liefer ' , ' I had liefer ' , ' I am liefer ' , etc. § 40 • • · • • V xxiii 44556 ་ ་ 7 7 7 8 8 9 9 ΙΟ ΙΟ ΙΟ II 13 14 14 · 15 15 18 19 20 20 23 • 24 25 26 • • 29 31 • • 32 ' Me were better ' , ' I were better.
Page x
Visser, Fredericus Theodorus. ' Me were better ' , ' I were better ' , ' me had better ' , etc. § 41 ' Me is best ' , ' I had best ' , etc. § 42 . Transition ' me thinketh ' > ' I think ' § 43 • . IT AS SUBJECT A. Without reference to ...
Visser, Fredericus Theodorus. ' Me were better ' , ' I were better ' , ' me had better ' , etc. § 41 ' Me is best ' , ' I had best ' , etc. § 42 . Transition ' me thinketh ' > ' I think ' § 43 • . IT AS SUBJECT A. Without reference to ...
Page xiii
... better , easier , etc. § 168 • 142 142 • 142 • 142 · 143 • • 144 • · · 145 · 146 • 146 · 147 150 · · 152 · 154 154 • • 154 • 155 . 155 • 158 159 160 160 · • 160 161 161 161 162 162 • . 163 166 With will not , would not ( ' The figures ...
... better , easier , etc. § 168 • 142 142 • 142 • 142 · 143 • • 144 • · · 145 · 146 • 146 · 147 150 · · 152 · 154 154 • • 154 • 155 . 155 • 158 159 160 160 · • 160 161 161 161 162 162 • . 163 166 With will not , would not ( ' The figures ...
Page xix
... better if ... § 512 · in type ' he brought it to pass that ... ' § 513 • · • • . in type ' I heard it said that ... ' § 514 in type ' He broke it to me that ... ' § 515 . in type ' I will see ( to it ) that ... ' §§ 516-20 in type ' he ...
... better if ... § 512 · in type ' he brought it to pass that ... ' § 513 • · • • . in type ' I heard it said that ... ' § 514 in type ' He broke it to me that ... ' § 515 . in type ' I will see ( to it ) that ... ' §§ 516-20 in type ' he ...
Page lvi
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Contents
Preface | xxiii |
CHAPTER | 3 |
d Indirect Object + Direct Object | 4 |
Type pay loved samen together between mutually 4845 | 5 |
In invocations type A bless you | 9 |
in Old English 160 | 11 |
In stage directions type A sits down | 15 |
Apo koinou construction in dialects | 21 |
Views of English and American grammarians concerning this form 267 | 244 |
Type this book is hers ours yours theirs etc 280 | 253 |
192 | 260 |
in Modern English 151 | 263 |
Type It was of a brown colour it was of no use 296 | 266 |
Me as subject a survival of O E impersonal constructions | 269 |
Oblique form after than and as | 275 |
189 | 288 |
Formal it in hit macian to hop it to lord it to rough it etc 492500 | 26 |
Type A is pity that he went | 27 |
Absence of the relative objectpronoun 62744 | 31 |
Obsolescence of the himhine hungreth construction 3438 | 34 |
e Direct Object + Direct Object | 35 |
In statements referring to the weather etc | 36 |
Me is liefer I had liefer I am liefer etc | 40 |
Type Ic it eom | 42 |
in Modern English 162 | 46 |
Type It is asked me + clause | 49 |
in Old English after se þ¿s þam þa and after nouns 627 | 51 |
xxiii | 53 |
Type He was rich was Dick | 55 |
Type Our Lord that in hevene ne erthe he ne hath non pere 75 | 58 |
Collective nouns not denoting persons | 70 |
Everybody idem | 77 |
connected by neither nor 101 | 83 |
Two coordinated subjects of different person III | 89 |
51 | 92 |
Concord after myself thyself etc used as subject | 95 |
Verbs representing the action as quasiautomatic 163 | 100 |
Concord in number after para pe | 110 |
VERB WITHOUT COMPLEMENT | 115 |
With the adverbs best better easier etc 168 | 119 |
The various types | 129 |
Type Ic was him + adjective e g Ic was him leof 33349 | 142 |
Quasitransitive verbs e g to amble to hop | 145 |
Independent to be 1701 | 160 |
Idem + at or + for e g What are you at I am for him | 171 |
in early Modern English 629 | 172 |
Type They didnt like it Or did they? 205 | 176 |
Independent may | 177 |
with subject preceding as John does | 183 |
After than 189193 | 189 |
The verb itself repeated with retention of so | 214 |
The complement of the copulas 240307 | 219 |
C With no more neither ne nor | 220 |
190 | 228 |
191 | 234 |
611 | 306 |
Type Him tweonode impersonal | 311 |
618 | 330 |
Idem with other verbs than beon e g ic weard him wrad | 348 |
Type He was me + noun e g He was me freond 35066 | 354 |
g Types Feower d¿las beop dam bisceope A sone was not to him | 363 |
Character of causative object as sole object he weorces gefeah | 370 |
Verbs of French origin with idem | 376 |
Verbs of touching | 382 |
VISSER An Historical English Syntax | 385 |
type Hy wynsomedon on God | 396 |
type This pay marvailed on | 408 |
Types To whom should he appeal?Whom sh he appeal to? | 414 |
The direct object as sole object 418666 | 420 |
b in Middle English 495 | 439 |
621 | 451 |
Heralding objects 50126 | 459 |
in type she told it that she was guilty 50510 | 466 |
Relative pronouns used as objects 53247 | 488 |
537 | 491 |
Can could + object 551 | 500 |
Cognate objects 42224 | 502 |
655 | 509 |
The Object Used Twice 598611 | 518 |
Instrumental objects 425 | 520 |
Absolute | 525 |
646 | 552 |
c with the verb to have He has a son an heir 64951 | 564 |
g with verbs of showing betraying dissembling | 574 |
Type he slept himself sober with resultative adjunct 659 | 596 |
Similarly with indirect and prepositional objects | 603 |
Type She slew him Holofernus | 609 |
Absence of the Object 61244 | 615 |
Type He hine an bigspell ahsode 698 | 635 |
Type He bereafedon hine of his life 7012 | 643 |
649 | |
655 | |
Other editions - View all
An Historical Syntax of the English Language, 3. köide,1. number Frederik Theodor Visser Limited preview - 1969 |
Common terms and phrases
¿fter ¯lfred ¯lfric Battle of Maldon Bede Smith Ben Jonson beon Beowulf Blickl Boeth C. P. Sweet Cardale Caxton Chaucer Cockayne construction copula Crist Curs dative Dial Dickens Dryden ealle eallum EETS English Grammar English Language Everym folc fultumes Genesis gode Gower Greg hath haue heora hine Hist hw¿t Idem intr Jespersen king Krapp kyng Language Layamon Lindisf London Lord m¿g mannum Middle English MMED Modern English Myst Napier noun O. E. Chron O. E. Gosp object obsol Old English Oros Paris plural preposition Pres pronoun S¿t Saints sceal Scott Shakesp singular swide Syntax Tauchn thee Thorpe thou verb VIII w¿re W¿rferth w¿ron weard whan wolde Wulfstan Wyclif Zandvoort þ¿s þ¿t þam þan þat þei þet þing þis þonne