Utilizing the variationist method, this contribution is concerned with the alternation between the s-genitive (the president’s speech) and the of-genitive (the speech of the president) in Late Modern English news prose as sampled in ARCHER. A frequency analysis reveals that text frequencies of the s-genitive collapsed in the early 19th century, but recovered afterwards. Linear regression analysis indicates that slightly over half of this frequency variability is induced by “environmental” changes in the news genre habitat, such as varying input frequencies of human possessors. To investigate the remaining variability, we fit a logistic regression model and show that genitive choice grammars changed genuinely in regard to four language-internal conditioning factors: POSSESSOR ANIMACY, GENITIVE RELATION, POSSESSUM LENGTH, and POSSESSOR THEMATICITY. Applying customary grammaticalization diagnostics, we conclude that while the s-genitive was subject to grammaticalization in the 19th century, it actually degrammaticalized during the 20th century.
2021. Word-order variation in a contact setting: A corpus-based investigation of Russian spoken in Daghestan. Language Variation and Change 33:3 ► pp. 387 ff.
Jackson, Carrie N., Abigail Massaro & Holger Hopp
2017. The impact of L1 structural frequency and cognate status on the timing of L2 production. Journal of Cognitive Psychology 29:5 ► pp. 535 ff.
Schätzle, Christin
2017. Genitiv als Stilmittel in der Novelle. Zeitschrift für Literaturwissenschaft und Linguistik 47:1 ► pp. 125 ff.
EHRET, KATHARINA, CHRISTOPH WOLK & BENEDIKT SZMRECSANYI
2014. Quirky quadratures: on rhythm and weight as constraints on genitive variation in an unconventional data set. English Language and Linguistics 18:2 ► pp. 263 ff.
GRAFMILLER, JASON
2014. Variation in English genitives across modality and genres. English Language and Linguistics 18:3 ► pp. 471 ff.
JANKOWSKI, BRIDGET L. & SALI A. TAGLIAMONTE
2014. On the genitive's trail: data and method from a sociolinguistic perspective. English Language and Linguistics 18:2 ► pp. 305 ff.
ROSENBACH, ANETTE
2014. English genitive variation – the state of the art. English Language and Linguistics 18:2 ► pp. 215 ff.
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