*haitan in Gothic and Old English

Authors
Publication date 2013
Journal Studies in Language Companion Series
Event workshop on the "Contrastive study of the verbal categories and their grammaticalisation in Old English and Old High German" held at the 16th ICEHL in Pécs, Hungary
Volume | Issue number 138
Pages (from-to) 17-40
Organisations
  • Faculty of Humanities (FGw) - Amsterdam Institute for Humanities Research (AIHR) - Amsterdam Center for Language and Communication (ACLC)
Abstract
By collecting data from various corpora, I examine and compare the use of the Gothic haitan and Old English hātan reflexes of *haitan, a transitive verb that develops into a copula-like verb in the other Germanic languages. Between the two languages, this verb can occur in five constructions: calling, transitive naming, infinitival commanding, subclause commanding, and copular naming. Both Gothic and Early Old English share the use of this verb in calling constructions whereas the subclause commanding construction is an Old English innovation and the copular naming construction does not appear until Late Old English. Regardless of the language or period, however, when *haitan occurs in transitive naming constructions, it strongly favours passive voice, which may explain its later use in copular naming constructions. Moreover, an examination of the competitors of Gothic *haitan show that it has strong competition from various verbs in each of its functions, though the competition in the transitive naming construction is weakest.
Document type Article
Note Proceedings title: Comparative studies in early Germanic languages: with a focus on verbal categories Publisher: John Benjamins Place of publication: Amsterdam ISBN: 9789027206053 Editors: G. Diewald, L. Kahlas-Tarkka, I. Wischer
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1075/slcs.138.02clo
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