Title of article
The consequences of the loss of verb-second in English information structure and syntax in interaction
Author/Authors
LOS، BETTELOU نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
29
From page
97
To page
125
Abstract
English syntax used to have a version of the verb-second rule, by which the finite verb
moves to second position in main clauses. This rule was lost in Middle English, and this
article argues that its loss had serious consequences for the information structure of the
clause. In the new, rigid subject-verb-object syntax, the function of preposed constituents
changed, and the function of encoding ‘old’ or ‘given’ information in a pragmatically
neutral way was increasingly reserved for subjects. Pressure from information structure
to repair this situation subsequently led to the rise of new passive constructions in order
to satisfy the need for more subjects; the change in the informational status of preposed
constituents triggered the rise of clefts. If information structure can be compromised by
syntactic change in this way, this suggests that it represents a separate linguistic level
outside the syntax.
Journal title
English Language and Linguistics
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
English Language and Linguistics
Record number
653604
Link To Document