This article presents a critical discussion of Inertia Theory (Longobardi 2001; 2003), according to which syntactic change never originates in syntax itself. We argue that syntactic change originates in language usage, which includes the possibility that it may be triggered by genuinely syntactic factors. In order to substantiate this claim, two syntactic changes are studied in detail, namely the rise of French est-ce que as an interrogative particle and the reanalysis of presentational hay + noun “there is + noun” in Spanish. We show that the reanalysis of est-ce que as a marker of ‘strong’ interrogation is pragmatically motivated and brought about by frequent usage. By contrast, the reanalysis of impersonal presentative hay + noun in certain varieties of Spanish is shown to be triggered by conflicting linking strategies, and must therefore be considered an instance of syntactically motivated syntactic change.
2017. Non-syntactic Sources and Triggers of Syntactic Change. In The Cambridge Handbook of Historical Syntax, ► pp. 556 ff.
Willis, David
2017. Endogenous and Exogenous Theories of Syntactic Change. In The Cambridge Handbook of Historical Syntax, ► pp. 491 ff.
Claes, Jeroen
2014. A Cognitive Construction Grammar approach to the pluralization of presentational haber in Puerto Rican Spanish. Language Variation and Change 26:2 ► pp. 219 ff.
2012. Grammatical relation probability: How usage patterns shape analogy. Language Variation and Change 24:3 ► pp. 317 ff.
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