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| en:eebo:morphology1 [2016/08/19 18:32] – [Second person possessive adjectives thy and thine] veronikapojarova | en:eebo:morphology1 [2018/07/30 14:51] (current) – vaclavcvrcek | ||
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| In Early Modern English, there was a number of morphemes which carried essentially the same meaning. For example, the plural markers < -en> and < -s> were sometimes interchangeable, | In Early Modern English, there was a number of morphemes which carried essentially the same meaning. For example, the plural markers < -en> and < -s> were sometimes interchangeable, | ||
| - | ====== Second person possessive adjectives | + | ====== Second person possessive adjectives ====== |
| Before the regularization resulting in today’s form //your//, Early Modern English had two forms, //thy// and //thine//, both of which functioned as second person possessive adjectives, as in //thy beautiful face// and //thine eyes//. | Before the regularization resulting in today’s form //your//, Early Modern English had two forms, //thy// and //thine//, both of which functioned as second person possessive adjectives, as in //thy beautiful face// and //thine eyes//. | ||
| - | We might immediately think that the distinction is analogous to present day //my// and //mine//. However, it is not the case. Although in Early Modern English the two pairs of possessives behaved | + | We might immediately think that the distinction is analogous to present day //my// and //mine//. However, it was not as straightforward. In Early Modern English the two pairs of possessives behaved as they do today, i.e. the possessive adjective // |
| - | In actual fact, the case appears to be that the case of the //thy/ thine// allomorphs | + | It appears to be the case that the //thy/ thine// allomorphs |
| ====== Searching the corpus ====== | ====== Searching the corpus ====== | ||
| + | If we want the results to include both forms, the query in [[en: | ||
| + | '' | ||
| + | |||
| + | Naturally, there are many other spelling variants; for example //thaw// from Northern dialects, //theye// from Northumberland, | ||
| + | |||
| + | <WRAP round tip 50%> | ||
| + | Question: The concordance view shows a random grouping of all the results, including both //thy// and //thine//. How can we select one form from these results and view it separately? | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | By going to Frequency -> Node forms, we can see all of the forms returned by our search, which is in this case just the two. Underneath **Filter**, we can click on “p” or “n” depending on whether we want a positive filter (we see only the results with the given form) or a negative filter (we see all the results but those with the selected form). This is useful with a larger number of node forms. | ||
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| + | {{: | ||
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| + | When we select a positive filter for the variant //thine// we get a list of results containing this form. Frequency -> Custom -> Multilevel Frequency Distribution allows us to explore the words which most frequently follow //thine//. In order to see a list of words which occur immediately following it (1st position to the right of the node), we select the position 1R. | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{: | ||
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| + | The list shows that thine is most often followed by a vowel, or a word beginning with <h>. This is most probably due to the fact that the initial <h> was often dropped, and this was not always reflected by the spelling. It is very plausible that what was in fact pronounced in these examples (//heart//, //hand//) was in fact a vowel. The form //thine// also frequently appears at the end of a clause or sentence, which is denoted by the presence of a comma or full stop (less often a semicolon). In these cases we speak of the possessive pronoun //The heav’ns are thine//, not the possessive adjective //I will deliver thine enemy into thine hand//. Once again we may use the positive/ negative filters to view the concordance view for the individual results, e.g. all cases of the phrase //thine eares//. | ||
| + | |||
| + | The frequency list of words in the 1R position to the node thine: | ||
| + | |||
| + | {{: | ||
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| + | === Task 1: Compare thy and thine === | ||
| + | |||
| + | <WRAP round help 50%> | ||
| + | * Compare the results for //thine// with those for //thy//. | ||
| + | * Are the two forms in complementary distribution or are there overlapping contexts? | ||
| + | * What do the result tell us about words such as //heart// and //hand//? | ||
| + | </ | ||
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| + | |||
| + | === Task 2: Try another pair of allomorphs === | ||
| + | |||
| + | <WRAP round help 50%> | ||
| + | * Search for //orrible// and // | ||
| + | * Think about possible spelling variants; can they be included in the search? | ||
| + | * See how the phonetic environment affects the dropping of the [h]. | ||
| + | * Does the corpus testify the existence of //too orrible//? Why/ why not? | ||
| + | * Make sure that the Query type is set to CQL. | ||
| + | </ | ||
| + | |||
| + | ---- | ||
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| + | **If you are ready, you can continue to [[en: | ||
| + | |||
| + | ---- | ||