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2016 | 25/3 | 147-162

Article title

Some Remarks on Shall’s and a Hypothesis of its Origin

Content

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Languages of publication

Abstracts

EN
The present study focuses on the origin of the idiom shall’s ‘shall we’ in two corpora: the online database The Collected Works of Shakespeare and a corpus of Ben Jonson works compiled on the basis of online html texts linked to the webpage Luminarium: Anthology of English Literature. The Works of Ben Jonson. The paper discusses available accounts of the issue offered by late nineteenth and early twentieth century linguists and juxtaposes them with new findings and observations. The author analyzes data concerning shall’s, shall us, shall we, let’s and let us to suggest a new hypothesis on the potential rise of shall’s, i.e. that the idiom resulted from a blending of shall we and let’s.

Contributors

  • University of Warsaw

References

  • Collected Works of Shakespeare. http://www.cs.usyd.edu.au/~matty/Shakespeare/.
  • De Smet, Hendrik, Susanne Flach, Jukka Tyrkkö, and Hans-Jürgen Diller. 2015. The Corpus of Late Modern English (CLMET), version 3.1: Improved Tokenization and Linguistic Annotation. KU Leuven, FU Berlin, U Tampere, RU Bochum. https://perswww.kuleuven.be/~u0044428/clmet3_1.htm.
  • Luminarium: Anthology of English Literature. The Works of Ben Jonson. http://www.luminarium.org/sevenlit/jonson/benbib.htm
  • Markus, Manfred, ed. 1999. Innsbruck Computer Archive of Machine-Readable English Texts. (CD-ROM version). The Prose Corpus 1100–1500. Innsbruck: University of Innsbruck.
  • Abbott, Edwin Abbott. 1870. A Shakespearian Grammar: An Attempt to Illustrate Some of the Differences between Elizabethan and Modern English. Revised and enlarged edition. London: Macmillan and Co.
  • Blake, Norman Francis. 2002. A Grammar of Shakespeare’s Language. Houndmills, Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave.
  • Hope, Jonathan. 2003. Shakespeare’s Grammar. The Arden Shakespeare. London: Bloomsbury.
  • Jespersen, Otto. 1962. Chapters on English (1918). [In:] Otto Jespersen Selected Writings of Otto Jespersen (1860–1943). London: George Allen & Unwin; Tokyo: Senjo Publishing Co. Chapter II. Case-Shiftings in the Pronouns. 200–296. Appendix to Chapter VIII. “Bill stumps his mark,” etc. 336–345.
  • Pegge, Samuel, and Henry Christmas, eds. 1844. Anecdotes of the English Language. London: J.B. Nichols and Son.
  • Smith, Charles Alphonso. 1906. Studies in English Syntax. Boston: Ginn & Company.
  • Storm, Johan Frederik Breda. 1896. Englische Philologie. Leipzig: O. R. Reisland.
  • Visser, F. Th. 1984. An Historical Syntax of the English Language. P. 2, Syntactical Units with One Verb (continued). Leiden: E. J. Brill

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.desklight-fbb6289e-e7d2-453c-81bb-5a434cc761a5
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