• No results found

Modala hjälpverb i språkhistorisk belysning

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2021

Share "Modala hjälpverb i språkhistorisk belysning"

Copied!
2
0
0

Loading.... (view fulltext now)

Full text

(1)

Göteborgsstudier i nordisk språkvetenskap 23

Modala hjälpverb i språkhistorisk belysning

(English Summary)

av Marika Lagervall

Akademisk avhandling för filosofie doktorsexamen i nordiska språk, som med tillstånd av hu- manistiska fakultetens dekan kommer att försvaras offentligt lördagen den 20 september 2014 kl. 10.15 i Lilla hörsalen, Humanisten.

(2)

title: Modal auxiliaries from a diachronic perspective.

swedish title: Modala hjälpverb i språkhistorisk belysning.

language: Swedish (English summary) author: Marika Lagervall

Abstract

In this thesis, the syntactic and morphological characteristics of modal verbs in Swedish have been investigated in order to identify and examine the changes these verbs have undergone. The survey was conducted as a quantitative comparative study in corpus-based materials from both medieval and contemporary Swedish texts. The results show that some of the characteristic pro- perties of modal verbs are connected to the origin of the verbs and to different language changes, e.g. that the verbs occur without the infinitive marker, while others are related to their deve- lopment into more typical auxiliary verbs, i.e. losing their ability to be used independently.

In order to define the category of modal verbs, a combination of several criteria is required.

The weighting of the criteria is important, as is to which extent a verb must fulfill a criterion in order to count as a modal verb. The results also show that the verbs evolve towards being more and more grammatical words. In this grammaticalization process, some of the changes apply to all verbs and are therefore predictable, whereas others apply only to certain verbs.

A comparison with modal verbs in other Germanic languages shows many similarities, which follow from their common origin in a Germanic inflection category called preterite-present verbs.

The modal verbs have undergone similar changes in the different languages, but at different rates.

In addition the verbs have, in varying degrees, been affected by other language changes.

keywords: Modal verbs, auxiliaries, modality, preterite-present verbs, Germanic languages, in- finitive marker, language change, grammaticalization, Swedish.

© Marika Lagervall

distribution: Institutionen för svenska språket Box 200

405 30 Göteborg

omslagsbild: Richard Bergh, Nordisk sommarkväll (1899-1900). Göteborgs konstmuseum.

foto porträtt: Kenneth Eriksson issn: 1652-3105

isbn: 978-91-87850-54-7

länk till e-publicering: http://hdl.handle.net/2077/36007 sättning: Björn-Eric Abrahamsson

tryckning: Repro Lorensberg, Göteborgs universitet

References

Related documents

Uncontrollable physiological sounds are sounds accompanying bodily processes, and it occurs 96 times in the data. The situation is sub-categorised as coughing, snoring or sound

category. Furthermore, the corpora this study analyzed comprise student essays which were submitted at 15 different universities in Sweden. But, the first 100

The things I have looked at in both of the dictionaries is the style of definition, the grammar codes, the example sentences, if they use full sentences or part sentences, how they

Thirdly, the translations were analysed in terms of morphology with a main emphasis on inflectional morphology as regards pronouns: personal, possessive, reflexive, relative

Keywords: irregular verbs, -ed forms, non-standard usage, Present-day American English, past participle, preterit, COCA (Corpus of Contemporary American English), standardization,

När det gäller de deontiska modala hjälpverben används flera olika hjälpverb och former på den mer avancerade nivån såsom måste, bör, borde, får, kan och behöver medan

The figurative, or secondary sense - of its corresponding primary sense - is listed in the dictionary as Sense 2, whereas the concrete, primary 'primitive' sense in this case -

The following verbs visualize a movement associated with a certain emotion: climb – climb the walls; crawl – make your flesh crawl; float – be floating on air; go – go off the