Title of article :
What else happened to English? A brief for the Celtic hypothesis
Author/Authors :
McWhorter، John H. نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages :
29
From page :
163
To page :
191
Abstract :
This article argues that despite traditional skepticism among most specialists on the history of English thatBrythonicCeltic languages could have had any significant structural impact on English’s evolution, the source of periphrastic do in Cornish’s equivalent construction is virtually impossible to deny on the basis of a wide range of evidence. That Welsh and Cornish borrowed the construction from English is impossible given its presence in Breton, whose speakers left Britain in the fifth century. The paucity of Celtic loanwords in English is paralleled by equivalent paucity in undisputed contact cases such as Uralic’s on Russian. Traditional language-internal accounts suffer from a degree of ad hocness. Finally, periphrastic do is much rarer cross-linguistically than typically acknowledged, which lends further support to a contact account.
Journal title :
English Language and Linguistics
Serial Year :
2009
Journal title :
English Language and Linguistics
Record number :
653618
Link To Document :
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