An Historical Syntax of the English Language, 3. köide,1. numberBrill Archive, 1969 - 2 pages |
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Page xxiii
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Page xxxi
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Page xxxv
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Contents
Bibliography | xxiii |
Reflexive objects 42678 | xl |
in Modern English 45578 | xlix |
CHAPTER | 3 |
Type Ge lufiad eow betwixan 483 | 5 |
a Indirect Object + Causative Object | 7 |
After exclamations type Poor jade is dead | 9 |
Verbs now with now without reflexive object 160 | 11 |
b Subject pluralpredicate noun singular 259 | 234 |
of verbs requiring a complement in the dative 153 | 236 |
Views of English and American grammarians concerning this form 267 | 244 |
Me as subject in other cases | 270 |
The copula to be used twice He is by way of being a hero 308 | 275 |
182 | 286 |
274 | 304 |
Type Him tweonode impersonal | 311 |
280 | 14 |
In stage directions type A sits down | 15 |
Apo koinou construction in dialects | 21 |
Type A is pity that he went | 27 |
Absence of the relative objectpronoun 62744 | 31 |
Idem + infinitive | 33 |
In statements referring to the weather etc | 36 |
The dress became herShe became her dress | 39 |
Type Ic it eom | 42 |
Verbs representing the action as quasiautomatic 163 | 46 |
Type It is asked me + clause | 49 |
Type He cwæd Alexander | 55 |
Type Our Lord that in hevene ne erthe he ne hath non pere 75 | 58 |
Collective nouns not denoting persons | 70 |
Fela and unrim idem | 78 |
b Direct Object + Causative Object | 80 |
39 | 81 |
Concord of copula connecting nouns of different number 104 | 85 |
Two coordinated subjects of different person III | 89 |
Concord after myself thyself etc used as subject 126 | 95 |
d Indirect Object + Direct Object | 97 |
Concord in number after para pe | 110 |
43 | 114 |
46 | 125 |
The transitive use of verbs usually called intransitive | 133 |
49 | 136 |
Quasitransitive verbs e g to amble to hop | 145 |
in Old English after se þæs þam þa and after nouns 627 | 146 |
51 | 156 |
100 | 157 |
With the adverbs best better easier etc | 158 |
Independent weordan | 172 |
Types You saw him didnt you?You didnt see him did you? 202 | 175 |
Type the man we laughed at 6324 | 178 |
Independent shall will can may must dare + adjunct of direction 1789 | 180 |
Absence of do in these cases | 186 |
The verb itself repeated in these cases | 192 |
The verb itself repeated with retention of so | 214 |
The complement of the copulas 240307 | 219 |
C With no more neither ne nor | 220 |
Definition of the term copula | 228 |
Type Would to God | 320 |
Type Ic was him + adjective e g Ic was him leof 33349 | 331 |
311 | 337 |
313 | 350 |
c in Modern English 4969 | 353 |
b The noun does not denote a person e g He was me scyld 3556 | 357 |
g Types Feower dælas beop dam bisceope A sone was not to him | 363 |
Character of causative object as sole object he weorces gefeah | 370 |
Disappearance of causative object after O E period 3734 | 377 |
189 | 381 |
Verbs of touching | 382 |
type Hy wynsomedon on God | 396 |
type Seo burg was fager on to locianne | 404 |
type The Lord that ic believe on | 410 |
The preposition used twice | 416 |
Heralding objects 50126 | 459 |
Can could + object 551 | 500 |
Preposit object after such groups as break in upon look out for 417 | 505 |
in type she told it that she was guilty 50510 | 511 |
The Object Used Twice 598611 | 518 |
Objects of result 421 | 520 |
in type he imposed it on me to go there | 521 |
Absolute | 525 |
So as quasi object 52731 | 528 |
Oblique form in interjectional phrases 276 | 533 |
Type that death which thou shalt wish thou haddest dyed | 540 |
355 | 550 |
Direct Object + Predicative Adjunct 64675 | 553 |
358 | 573 |
450 | 576 |
Types He took off his hatHe took his hat off 66875 | 597 |
Similarly with indirect and prepositional objects | 603 |
Type She slew him Holofernus | 609 |
Cognate objects 42224 | 615 |
Type He hine an bigspell ahsode 698 | 635 |
Type I lost sight of them they cried shame on us 703 | 643 |
525 | 648 |
649 | |
656 | |
Other editions - View all
An Historical Syntax of the English Language, 3. köide Visser, Fredericus Theodorus Limited preview - 1963 |
Common terms and phrases
æfter Ælfred Ælfric Ancr Bede Smith Ben Jonson beon Beowulf Blickl Boeth C. P. Sweet Cardale Caxton Chaucer Cockayne complement construction copula Crist Curs dæt dative Dial Dryden ealle eallum EETS English Grammar English Language Everym folc fultumes Genesis gode Gower Greg hath haue heora hine hire Hist hwæt Idem intr intransitive intransitive verbs Jespersen king Krapp kyng Language Layamon Lindisf London Lord mæg mannum Middle English MMED Myst Napier noun O. E. Chron O. E. Gosp object obsol Old English Oros Paris plural Poems preposition Pres pronoun Sæt Saints sceal Scott Shakesp singular swide Syntax Tauchn thee Thorpe thou verb VIII wære Wærferth weard wolde Wulfstan Wyclif Zandvoort þæs þæt þam þan þat þei þet þing þis þonne þou