Alternation vs. Allomorphic Variation in Old English Word-Formation: Evidence from the Derivational Paradigm of Strong Verbs

This article addresses the question of Old English alternations with a view to identifying instances of allomorphic variation attributable to the loss of motivation and the subsequent morphologization of alternations. The focus is on the strong verb and its derivatives, in such a way that the altern...

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Main Authors: Urraca Carmen Novo, Fernández Laura Pesquera
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2015-01-01
Series:Studia Anglica Posnaniensia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/stap-2014-0008
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spelling doaj-29505b36ca024952a2181b04fd3f614a2021-09-05T14:02:04ZengSciendoStudia Anglica Posnaniensia0081-62722082-51022015-01-01492638210.2478/stap-2014-0008stap-2014-0008Alternation vs. Allomorphic Variation in Old English Word-Formation: Evidence from the Derivational Paradigm of Strong VerbsUrraca Carmen Novo0Fernández Laura Pesquera1Universidad de La RiojaUniversidad de La RiojaThis article addresses the question of Old English alternations with a view to identifying instances of allomorphic variation attributable to the loss of motivation and the subsequent morphologization of alternations. The focus is on the strong verb and its derivatives, in such a way that the alternations in which the strong verb partakes can be predicted on the basis of phonological principles, whereas allomorphic variation with respect to the strong verb base is unpredictable. Out of 304 derivational paradigms based on strong verbs and comprising 4,853 derivatives, 478 instances have been found of phonologically motivated vocalic alternations. The conclusion is reached that the most frequent alternations are those that have /a/ as source and those with /y/ as target, because /a/ is the point of departure of i-mutation and /y/ its point of arrival. Sixteen instances of allomorphic variation have also been found, of which /e/ ~ /eo/, /e/ ~ /ea/ and /i/ ~ /e/ are relatively frequent.https://doi.org/10.2478/stap-2014-0008allomorphic variationalternationsderivativesmorphologystrong verb
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Urraca Carmen Novo
Fernández Laura Pesquera
spellingShingle Urraca Carmen Novo
Fernández Laura Pesquera
Alternation vs. Allomorphic Variation in Old English Word-Formation: Evidence from the Derivational Paradigm of Strong Verbs
Studia Anglica Posnaniensia
allomorphic variation
alternations
derivatives
morphology
strong verb
author_facet Urraca Carmen Novo
Fernández Laura Pesquera
author_sort Urraca Carmen Novo
title Alternation vs. Allomorphic Variation in Old English Word-Formation: Evidence from the Derivational Paradigm of Strong Verbs
title_short Alternation vs. Allomorphic Variation in Old English Word-Formation: Evidence from the Derivational Paradigm of Strong Verbs
title_full Alternation vs. Allomorphic Variation in Old English Word-Formation: Evidence from the Derivational Paradigm of Strong Verbs
title_fullStr Alternation vs. Allomorphic Variation in Old English Word-Formation: Evidence from the Derivational Paradigm of Strong Verbs
title_full_unstemmed Alternation vs. Allomorphic Variation in Old English Word-Formation: Evidence from the Derivational Paradigm of Strong Verbs
title_sort alternation vs. allomorphic variation in old english word-formation: evidence from the derivational paradigm of strong verbs
publisher Sciendo
series Studia Anglica Posnaniensia
issn 0081-6272
2082-5102
publishDate 2015-01-01
description This article addresses the question of Old English alternations with a view to identifying instances of allomorphic variation attributable to the loss of motivation and the subsequent morphologization of alternations. The focus is on the strong verb and its derivatives, in such a way that the alternations in which the strong verb partakes can be predicted on the basis of phonological principles, whereas allomorphic variation with respect to the strong verb base is unpredictable. Out of 304 derivational paradigms based on strong verbs and comprising 4,853 derivatives, 478 instances have been found of phonologically motivated vocalic alternations. The conclusion is reached that the most frequent alternations are those that have /a/ as source and those with /y/ as target, because /a/ is the point of departure of i-mutation and /y/ its point of arrival. Sixteen instances of allomorphic variation have also been found, of which /e/ ~ /eo/, /e/ ~ /ea/ and /i/ ~ /e/ are relatively frequent.
topic allomorphic variation
alternations
derivatives
morphology
strong verb
url https://doi.org/10.2478/stap-2014-0008
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