219-7677 10 7500817 John Benjamins Publishing Company Marketing Department / Karin Plijnaar, Pieter Lamers onix@benjamins.nl 201608250410 ONIX title feed eng 01 EUR
25006485 03 01 01 JB John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 JB code P&bns 107 Eb 15 9789027296672 06 10.1075/pbns.107 13 2002034275 DG 002 02 01 P&bns 02 0922-842X Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 107 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Diachronic Perspectives on Address Term Systems</TitleText> 01 pbns.107 01 https://benjamins.com 02 https://benjamins.com/catalog/pbns.107 1 B01 Irma Taavitsainen Taavitsainen, Irma Irma Taavitsainen University of Helsinki 2 B01 Andreas H. Jucker Jucker, Andreas H. Andreas H. Jucker University of Zurich 01 eng 449 vii 441 LAN009000 v.2006 CFG 2 24 JB Subject Scheme LIN.DISC Discourse studies 24 JB Subject Scheme LIN.HL Historical linguistics 24 JB Subject Scheme LIN.PRAG Pragmatics 06 01 Address term systems and their diachronic developments are discussed in a wide range of European languages in this volume. Most chapters focus on pronominal systems, and in particular on the criteria that govern the choices between a more intimate and a more distant or polite pronoun, as for instance <i>thou</i> and <i>you</i> in Early Modern English, <i>vos</i> and <i>vuestra merced</i> in sixteenth century Spanish or <i>du</i> and <i>Sie</i> in Modern German. Several contributions deal with situations in which more than two terms can be used and several also note co-occurrence patterns of pronominal and nominal forms of address. The volume provides a multivaried picture of the evolutionary lines of address term systems and a representative range of current approaches from pragmatics and sociolinguistics to conversation analysis. It is thus a timely contribution to the rapidly expanding field of historical pragmatics. 05 In a way the book is almost too good. Being thorough in the subjects it touches upon and showing internal consistency, it is very nearly a textbook that one could wish for a measure of rewriting in order to go the whole way and make it really so. Margaret J-M Sonmez, Middle East Technical University, Ankara, on Linguist List 14-1841. 05 This book is a varied and absorbing collection which is a must for every researcher with interest in TOA theories. Daniel Z. Kadar, Eotvos Lorand University, Hungary 05 In conclusion, I would like to say that 'Diachronic Perspectives' is a real asset to the study of address forms. Many different perspectives are brought together and the introduction provides a comprehensive and clear overview of the field. The editors put effort into relating papers to each other both by describing general issues in their introduction as well as by adding cross-references to papers with the same topic. They give a clear overview of recuring themes such as motivations in the choice of primary sources and the interpretation of pronoun switching, retractable address systems and norm deviation. The book also reveals problematic issues in address term research such as the issue of possible generalizations on data research. Suzanne Aalberse, Amsterdam, in Beiträge zur Geschichte der deutschen Sprache und Literatur, Band 127:2 (2005) 04 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475/pbns.107.png 04 03 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_jpg/9789027253484.jpg 04 03 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_tif/9789027253484.tif 06 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_front/pbns.107.hb.png 07 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/125/pbns.107.png 25 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_back/pbns.107.hb.png 27 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/3d_web/pbns.107.hb.png 10 01 JB code pbns.107.01pre vii 1 Miscellaneous 1 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Preface</TitleText> 10 01 JB code pbns.107.02juc 1 25 25 Article 2 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">1. Diachronic perspectives on address term systems</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Introduction</Subtitle> 1 A01 Andreas H. Jucker Jucker, Andreas H. Andreas H. Jucker 2 A01 Irma Taavitsainen Taavitsainen, Irma Irma Taavitsainen 10 01 JB code pbns.107.03bur 27 45 19 Article 3 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">2. The T/V pronouns in later Middle English Literature</TitleText> 1 A01 David Burnley Burnley, David David Burnley 10 01 JB code pbns.107.04hun 47 59 13 Article 4 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">3. The use of <i>tu</i>/<i>vus</i> in the Anglo-Norman <i>Seinte Resureccion</i></TitleText> 1 A01 Tony Hunt Hunt, Tony Tony Hunt 10 01 JB code pbns.107.05hon 61 84 24 Article 5 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">4. “And if ye wol nat so, my lady sweete, thanne preye I thee, [...].”</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Forms of address in Chaucer's Knight's Tale</Subtitle> 1 A01 Thomas Honegger Honegger, Thomas Thomas Honegger 10 01 JB code pbns.107.06sim 85 123 39 Article 6 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">5. From pragmatics to grammar</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Tracing the development of respect in the history of the German pronouns of address</Subtitle> 1 A01 Horst J. Simon Simon, Horst J. Horst J. Simon 10 01 JB code pbns.107.07bet 125 146 22 Article 7 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">6. The system of Czech bound address forms until 1700</TitleText> 1 A01 Michael Betsch Betsch, Michael Michael Betsch 10 01 JB code pbns.107.08nev 147 176 30 Article 8 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">7. Family first</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Address and subscription formulae in English family correspondence from the fifteenth to the seventeenth century</Subtitle> 1 A01 Minna Nevala Nevala, Minna Minna Nevala 10 01 JB code pbns.107.09ben 177 191 15 Article 9 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">8. Spanish forms of address in the sixteenth century</TitleText> 1 A01 Paola Bentivoglio Bentivoglio, Paola Paola Bentivoglio 10 01 JB code pbns.107.10bus 193 221 29 Article 10 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">9. The co-occurrence of nominal and pronominal address froms in the Shakespeare Corpus</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Who says <i>thou</i> or <i>you </i>to whom?</Subtitle> 1 A01 Ulrich Busse Busse, Ulrich Ulrich Busse 10 01 JB code pbns.107.11maz 223 249 27 Article 11 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">10. Pronouns and nominal address in Shakespearean English</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">A socio-affective markings system in transition</Subtitle> 1 A01 Gabriella Mazzon Mazzon, Gabriella Gabriella Mazzon 10 01 JB code pbns.107.12ste 251 307 57 Article 12 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">11. Pronominal usage in Shakespeare</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Between sociolinguistics and conversation analysis</Subtitle> 1 A01 Dieter Stein Stein, Dieter Dieter Stein 10 01 JB code pbns.107.13wal 309 342 34 Article 13 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">12. <i>You</i> and <i>thou </i>in Early Modern English dialogues</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Patterns of usage</Subtitle> 1 A01 Terry Walker Walker, Terry Terry Walker 10 01 JB code pbns.107.14hic 345 374 30 Article 14 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">13. Rectifying a standard deficiency</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Second-person pronominal distinction in varieties of English</Subtitle> 1 A01 Raymond Hickey Hickey, Raymond Raymond Hickey 10 01 JB code pbns.107.15sep 375 399 25 Article 15 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">14. Demonstrative pronouns in addressing and referring Finnish</TitleText> 1 A01 Eeva-Leena Seppänen Seppänen, Eeva-Leena Eeva-Leena Seppänen 10 01 JB code pbns.107.16hic 401 425 25 Article 16 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">15. The German address system</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Binary and scalar at once</Subtitle> 1 A01 Raymond Hickey Hickey, Raymond Raymond Hickey 10 01 JB code pbns.107.17ind 427 430 4 Miscellaneous 17 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Index of subjects</TitleText> 10 01 JB code pbns.107.18ind 431 438 8 Miscellaneous 18 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Index of names</TitleText> 10 01 JB code pbns.107.19ind 439 441 3 Miscellaneous 19 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Index of languages</TitleText> 02 JBENJAMINS John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 John Benjamins Publishing Company Amsterdam/Philadelphia NL 04 20030623 2003 John Benjamins 02 WORLD 13 15 9789027253484 01 JB 3 John Benjamins e-Platform 03 jbe-platform.com 09 WORLD 21 01 00 130.00 EUR R 01 00 109.00 GBP Z 01 gen 00 195.00 USD S 502001981 03 01 01 JB John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 JB code P&bns 107 Hb 15 9789027253484 13 2002034275 BB 01 P&bns 02 0922-842X Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 107 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Diachronic Perspectives on Address Term Systems</TitleText> 01 pbns.107 01 https://benjamins.com 02 https://benjamins.com/catalog/pbns.107 1 B01 Irma Taavitsainen Taavitsainen, Irma Irma Taavitsainen University of Helsinki 2 B01 Andreas H. Jucker Jucker, Andreas H. Andreas H. Jucker University of Zurich 01 eng 449 vii 441 LAN009000 v.2006 CFG 2 24 JB Subject Scheme LIN.DISC Discourse studies 24 JB Subject Scheme LIN.HL Historical linguistics 24 JB Subject Scheme LIN.PRAG Pragmatics 06 01 Address term systems and their diachronic developments are discussed in a wide range of European languages in this volume. Most chapters focus on pronominal systems, and in particular on the criteria that govern the choices between a more intimate and a more distant or polite pronoun, as for instance <i>thou</i> and <i>you</i> in Early Modern English, <i>vos</i> and <i>vuestra merced</i> in sixteenth century Spanish or <i>du</i> and <i>Sie</i> in Modern German. Several contributions deal with situations in which more than two terms can be used and several also note co-occurrence patterns of pronominal and nominal forms of address. The volume provides a multivaried picture of the evolutionary lines of address term systems and a representative range of current approaches from pragmatics and sociolinguistics to conversation analysis. It is thus a timely contribution to the rapidly expanding field of historical pragmatics. 05 In a way the book is almost too good. Being thorough in the subjects it touches upon and showing internal consistency, it is very nearly a textbook that one could wish for a measure of rewriting in order to go the whole way and make it really so. Margaret J-M Sonmez, Middle East Technical University, Ankara, on Linguist List 14-1841. 05 This book is a varied and absorbing collection which is a must for every researcher with interest in TOA theories. Daniel Z. Kadar, Eotvos Lorand University, Hungary 05 In conclusion, I would like to say that 'Diachronic Perspectives' is a real asset to the study of address forms. Many different perspectives are brought together and the introduction provides a comprehensive and clear overview of the field. The editors put effort into relating papers to each other both by describing general issues in their introduction as well as by adding cross-references to papers with the same topic. They give a clear overview of recuring themes such as motivations in the choice of primary sources and the interpretation of pronoun switching, retractable address systems and norm deviation. The book also reveals problematic issues in address term research such as the issue of possible generalizations on data research. Suzanne Aalberse, Amsterdam, in Beiträge zur Geschichte der deutschen Sprache und Literatur, Band 127:2 (2005) 04 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475/pbns.107.png 04 03 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_jpg/9789027253484.jpg 04 03 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_tif/9789027253484.tif 06 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_front/pbns.107.hb.png 07 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/125/pbns.107.png 25 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_back/pbns.107.hb.png 27 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/3d_web/pbns.107.hb.png 10 01 JB code pbns.107.01pre vii 1 Miscellaneous 1 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Preface</TitleText> 10 01 JB code pbns.107.02juc 1 25 25 Article 2 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">1. Diachronic perspectives on address term systems</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Introduction</Subtitle> 1 A01 Andreas H. Jucker Jucker, Andreas H. Andreas H. Jucker 2 A01 Irma Taavitsainen Taavitsainen, Irma Irma Taavitsainen 10 01 JB code pbns.107.03bur 27 45 19 Article 3 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">2. The T/V pronouns in later Middle English Literature</TitleText> 1 A01 David Burnley Burnley, David David Burnley 10 01 JB code pbns.107.04hun 47 59 13 Article 4 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">3. The use of <i>tu</i>/<i>vus</i> in the Anglo-Norman <i>Seinte Resureccion</i></TitleText> 1 A01 Tony Hunt Hunt, Tony Tony Hunt 10 01 JB code pbns.107.05hon 61 84 24 Article 5 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">4. “And if ye wol nat so, my lady sweete, thanne preye I thee, [...].”</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Forms of address in Chaucer's Knight's Tale</Subtitle> 1 A01 Thomas Honegger Honegger, Thomas Thomas Honegger 10 01 JB code pbns.107.06sim 85 123 39 Article 6 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">5. From pragmatics to grammar</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Tracing the development of respect in the history of the German pronouns of address</Subtitle> 1 A01 Horst J. Simon Simon, Horst J. Horst J. Simon 10 01 JB code pbns.107.07bet 125 146 22 Article 7 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">6. The system of Czech bound address forms until 1700</TitleText> 1 A01 Michael Betsch Betsch, Michael Michael Betsch 10 01 JB code pbns.107.08nev 147 176 30 Article 8 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">7. Family first</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Address and subscription formulae in English family correspondence from the fifteenth to the seventeenth century</Subtitle> 1 A01 Minna Nevala Nevala, Minna Minna Nevala 10 01 JB code pbns.107.09ben 177 191 15 Article 9 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">8. Spanish forms of address in the sixteenth century</TitleText> 1 A01 Paola Bentivoglio Bentivoglio, Paola Paola Bentivoglio 10 01 JB code pbns.107.10bus 193 221 29 Article 10 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">9. The co-occurrence of nominal and pronominal address froms in the Shakespeare Corpus</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Who says <i>thou</i> or <i>you </i>to whom?</Subtitle> 1 A01 Ulrich Busse Busse, Ulrich Ulrich Busse 10 01 JB code pbns.107.11maz 223 249 27 Article 11 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">10. Pronouns and nominal address in Shakespearean English</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">A socio-affective markings system in transition</Subtitle> 1 A01 Gabriella Mazzon Mazzon, Gabriella Gabriella Mazzon 10 01 JB code pbns.107.12ste 251 307 57 Article 12 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">11. Pronominal usage in Shakespeare</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Between sociolinguistics and conversation analysis</Subtitle> 1 A01 Dieter Stein Stein, Dieter Dieter Stein 10 01 JB code pbns.107.13wal 309 342 34 Article 13 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">12. <i>You</i> and <i>thou </i>in Early Modern English dialogues</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Patterns of usage</Subtitle> 1 A01 Terry Walker Walker, Terry Terry Walker 10 01 JB code pbns.107.14hic 345 374 30 Article 14 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">13. Rectifying a standard deficiency</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Second-person pronominal distinction in varieties of English</Subtitle> 1 A01 Raymond Hickey Hickey, Raymond Raymond Hickey 10 01 JB code pbns.107.15sep 375 399 25 Article 15 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">14. Demonstrative pronouns in addressing and referring Finnish</TitleText> 1 A01 Eeva-Leena Seppänen Seppänen, Eeva-Leena Eeva-Leena Seppänen 10 01 JB code pbns.107.16hic 401 425 25 Article 16 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">15. The German address system</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Binary and scalar at once</Subtitle> 1 A01 Raymond Hickey Hickey, Raymond Raymond Hickey 10 01 JB code pbns.107.17ind 427 430 4 Miscellaneous 17 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Index of subjects</TitleText> 10 01 JB code pbns.107.18ind 431 438 8 Miscellaneous 18 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Index of names</TitleText> 10 01 JB code pbns.107.19ind 439 441 3 Miscellaneous 19 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Index of languages</TitleText> 02 JBENJAMINS John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 John Benjamins Publishing Company Amsterdam/Philadelphia NL 04 20030623 2003 John Benjamins 04 US CA MX 01 245 mm 02 164 mm 08 740 gr 01 JB 1 John Benjamins Publishing Company +31 20 6304747 +31 20 6739773 bookorder@benjamins.nl 01 https://benjamins.com 01 WORLD US CA MX 21 16 20 01 02 JB 1 00 130.00 EUR R 02 02 JB 1 00 137.80 EUR R 01 JB 10 bebc +44 1202 712 934 +44 1202 712 913 sales@bebc.co.uk 03 GB 21 20 02 02 JB 1 00 109.00 GBP Z 502001981 03 01 01 JB John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 JB code P&bns 107 Hb 15 9781588113108 13 2002034275 BB 01 P&bns 02 0922-842X Pragmatics & Beyond New Series 107 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Diachronic Perspectives on Address Term Systems</TitleText> 01 pbns.107 01 https://benjamins.com 02 https://benjamins.com/catalog/pbns.107 1 B01 Irma Taavitsainen Taavitsainen, Irma Irma Taavitsainen University of Helsinki 2 B01 Andreas H. Jucker Jucker, Andreas H. Andreas H. Jucker University of Zurich 01 eng 449 vii 441 LAN009000 v.2006 CFG 2 24 JB Subject Scheme LIN.DISC Discourse studies 24 JB Subject Scheme LIN.HL Historical linguistics 24 JB Subject Scheme LIN.PRAG Pragmatics 06 01 Address term systems and their diachronic developments are discussed in a wide range of European languages in this volume. Most chapters focus on pronominal systems, and in particular on the criteria that govern the choices between a more intimate and a more distant or polite pronoun, as for instance <i>thou</i> and <i>you</i> in Early Modern English, <i>vos</i> and <i>vuestra merced</i> in sixteenth century Spanish or <i>du</i> and <i>Sie</i> in Modern German. Several contributions deal with situations in which more than two terms can be used and several also note co-occurrence patterns of pronominal and nominal forms of address. The volume provides a multivaried picture of the evolutionary lines of address term systems and a representative range of current approaches from pragmatics and sociolinguistics to conversation analysis. It is thus a timely contribution to the rapidly expanding field of historical pragmatics. 05 In a way the book is almost too good. Being thorough in the subjects it touches upon and showing internal consistency, it is very nearly a textbook that one could wish for a measure of rewriting in order to go the whole way and make it really so. Margaret J-M Sonmez, Middle East Technical University, Ankara, on Linguist List 14-1841. 05 This book is a varied and absorbing collection which is a must for every researcher with interest in TOA theories. Daniel Z. Kadar, Eotvos Lorand University, Hungary 05 In conclusion, I would like to say that 'Diachronic Perspectives' is a real asset to the study of address forms. Many different perspectives are brought together and the introduction provides a comprehensive and clear overview of the field. The editors put effort into relating papers to each other both by describing general issues in their introduction as well as by adding cross-references to papers with the same topic. They give a clear overview of recuring themes such as motivations in the choice of primary sources and the interpretation of pronoun switching, retractable address systems and norm deviation. The book also reveals problematic issues in address term research such as the issue of possible generalizations on data research. Suzanne Aalberse, Amsterdam, in Beiträge zur Geschichte der deutschen Sprache und Literatur, Band 127:2 (2005) 04 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475/pbns.107.png 04 03 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_jpg/9789027253484.jpg 04 03 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_tif/9789027253484.tif 06 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_front/pbns.107.hb.png 07 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/125/pbns.107.png 25 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_back/pbns.107.hb.png 27 09 01 https://benjamins.com/covers/3d_web/pbns.107.hb.png 10 01 JB code pbns.107.01pre vii 1 Miscellaneous 1 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Preface</TitleText> 10 01 JB code pbns.107.02juc 1 25 25 Article 2 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">1. Diachronic perspectives on address term systems</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Introduction</Subtitle> 1 A01 Andreas H. Jucker Jucker, Andreas H. Andreas H. Jucker 2 A01 Irma Taavitsainen Taavitsainen, Irma Irma Taavitsainen 10 01 JB code pbns.107.03bur 27 45 19 Article 3 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">2. The T/V pronouns in later Middle English Literature</TitleText> 1 A01 David Burnley Burnley, David David Burnley 10 01 JB code pbns.107.04hun 47 59 13 Article 4 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">3. The use of <i>tu</i>/<i>vus</i> in the Anglo-Norman <i>Seinte Resureccion</i></TitleText> 1 A01 Tony Hunt Hunt, Tony Tony Hunt 10 01 JB code pbns.107.05hon 61 84 24 Article 5 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">4. “And if ye wol nat so, my lady sweete, thanne preye I thee, [...].”</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Forms of address in Chaucer's Knight's Tale</Subtitle> 1 A01 Thomas Honegger Honegger, Thomas Thomas Honegger 10 01 JB code pbns.107.06sim 85 123 39 Article 6 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">5. From pragmatics to grammar</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Tracing the development of respect in the history of the German pronouns of address</Subtitle> 1 A01 Horst J. Simon Simon, Horst J. Horst J. Simon 10 01 JB code pbns.107.07bet 125 146 22 Article 7 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">6. The system of Czech bound address forms until 1700</TitleText> 1 A01 Michael Betsch Betsch, Michael Michael Betsch 10 01 JB code pbns.107.08nev 147 176 30 Article 8 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">7. Family first</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Address and subscription formulae in English family correspondence from the fifteenth to the seventeenth century</Subtitle> 1 A01 Minna Nevala Nevala, Minna Minna Nevala 10 01 JB code pbns.107.09ben 177 191 15 Article 9 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">8. Spanish forms of address in the sixteenth century</TitleText> 1 A01 Paola Bentivoglio Bentivoglio, Paola Paola Bentivoglio 10 01 JB code pbns.107.10bus 193 221 29 Article 10 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">9. The co-occurrence of nominal and pronominal address froms in the Shakespeare Corpus</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Who says <i>thou</i> or <i>you </i>to whom?</Subtitle> 1 A01 Ulrich Busse Busse, Ulrich Ulrich Busse 10 01 JB code pbns.107.11maz 223 249 27 Article 11 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">10. Pronouns and nominal address in Shakespearean English</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">A socio-affective markings system in transition</Subtitle> 1 A01 Gabriella Mazzon Mazzon, Gabriella Gabriella Mazzon 10 01 JB code pbns.107.12ste 251 307 57 Article 12 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">11. Pronominal usage in Shakespeare</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Between sociolinguistics and conversation analysis</Subtitle> 1 A01 Dieter Stein Stein, Dieter Dieter Stein 10 01 JB code pbns.107.13wal 309 342 34 Article 13 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">12. <i>You</i> and <i>thou </i>in Early Modern English dialogues</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Patterns of usage</Subtitle> 1 A01 Terry Walker Walker, Terry Terry Walker 10 01 JB code pbns.107.14hic 345 374 30 Article 14 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">13. Rectifying a standard deficiency</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Second-person pronominal distinction in varieties of English</Subtitle> 1 A01 Raymond Hickey Hickey, Raymond Raymond Hickey 10 01 JB code pbns.107.15sep 375 399 25 Article 15 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">14. Demonstrative pronouns in addressing and referring Finnish</TitleText> 1 A01 Eeva-Leena Seppänen Seppänen, Eeva-Leena Eeva-Leena Seppänen 10 01 JB code pbns.107.16hic 401 425 25 Article 16 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">15. The German address system</TitleText> <Subtitle textformat="02">Binary and scalar at once</Subtitle> 1 A01 Raymond Hickey Hickey, Raymond Raymond Hickey 10 01 JB code pbns.107.17ind 427 430 4 Miscellaneous 17 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Index of subjects</TitleText> 10 01 JB code pbns.107.18ind 431 438 8 Miscellaneous 18 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Index of names</TitleText> 10 01 JB code pbns.107.19ind 439 441 3 Miscellaneous 19 <TitleType>01</TitleType> <TitleText textformat="02">Index of languages</TitleText> 02 JBENJAMINS John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 John Benjamins Publishing Company Amsterdam/Philadelphia NL 04 20030623 2003 John Benjamins 02 US CA MX 01 245 mm 02 164 mm 08 740 gr 01 JB 2 John Benjamins North America +1 800 562-5666 +1 703 661-1501 benjamins@presswarehouse.com 01 https://benjamins.com 01 US CA MX 21 20 01 gen 02 JB 1 00 195.00 USD