'The king is on huntunge': on the relation between progressive and absentive in Old and Early Modern English

Authors
Publication date 2007
Host editors
  • M. Hannay
  • G.J. Steen
Book title Structural-functional studies in English grammar: in honour of Lachlan Mackenzie
Series Studies in language companion series, 83
Pages (from-to) 177-192
Organisations
  • Faculty of Humanities (FGw) - Amsterdam Institute for Humanities Research (AIHR) - Amsterdam Center for Language and Communication (ACLC)
Abstract
This paper addresses the diachronic development of two periphrastic constructions in Old and Middle English, 'He wæs huntende' and 'He wæs on huntunge', into the progressive in Modern English. The literature on the origin of the progressive offers several hypotheses for explaining the coalescence of the two constructions. This paper offers a new hypothesis based on the consideration that the first construction, consisting of be + present participle, developed into the progressive, and that the second construction, consisting of be + on + verbal noun, was originally a construction denoting absence. The evidence for the coalescence comes from a partial overlap in the semantics of the progressive and the absentive, and the fact that progressives often originate from spatial constructions.
Document type Chapter
Published at http://home.medewerker.uva.nl/c.degroot/bestanden/Huntunge%20paper%20final%20version.pdf
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