This study examines the morphological reflexes of grammatical negation in the older Germanic dialects, Gothic, Old High German, Old Saxon, Old English and Old Icelandic. The term 'grammatical negation' is defined by the class of negative morphemes which are phrase markers in a transformational-generative grammar. A syntactic-semantic delineation of the negative operation is presented to determine whether the various morphological shapes which the negative assumes in the surface level representations pose a problem of synonmy at the semantic level.
Each of the older dialects is treated synchronically using the initial parameter of grammatical categories. Both syntactic and semantic procedures are applied to the corpus for each dialect. Syntactic insight is gained by generating the surface negatives from one underlying abstract category after Klima's (1964) model. Semantic information for the negative is obtained from surface level syntagms, composed of a negative morpheme and a given grammatical morpheme, e.g., the verb, noun, or adverb. The syntagm is then subjected to a feature analysus.
The data for all five older Germanic dialects show that the negative morpheme plus finite verb bears a high functional load with regard to sentential negation.
Author(s): Virginia M. Coombs
Series: Göppinger Arbeiten zur Germanistik, 177
Publisher: Verlag Alfred Kümmerle
Year: 1976
Language: English
Pages: 308
City: Göppingen
Acknowledgement iii
Table of Contents iv
Chapter One: Introduction and Method 1
Chapter Two: Literature on Negation in the Older Germanic Dialects 12
Chapter Three: Gothic 26
Chapter Four: Old High German 74
Chapter Five: Old Saxon 117
Chapter Six: Old English 156
Chapter Seven: Old Icelandic 197
Chapter Eight: Interdialect Feature Contrasts and Conclusions 236
Appendix A: Gothic Data 248
Appendix B: Old High German Data 256
Appendix C: Old Saxon Data 264
Appendix D: Old English Data 272
Appendix E: Old Icelandic Data 279
Bibliography 286