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Hornung, Annette – ProQuest LLC, 2017
Scholars have long debated whether Old and Middle English (ME) are different diachronic stages of one language, or whether they are two closely related languages that have different historical roots. A general assumption is that Middle and Modern English descend from Old English (OE), similar to the way Middle and Modern German descend from Old…
Descriptors: Language Research, Old English, Contrastive Linguistics, Diachronic Linguistics
Simpson, Grant Leyton – ProQuest LLC, 2017
With few exceptions, digital humanities projects and objects have been described rather than studied. This dissertation attempts to advance that discourse by empirically studying, from a sociotechnical point of view, DH projects and the products they produce, specifically those within the realm of Old and Middle English language and literature.…
Descriptors: Humanities, Information Technology, Medieval Literature, English Literature
Carlson, Erik A. – ProQuest LLC, 2012
This dissertation examines the development of the Old English vocabulary for fear under the influence of the Latinate discourse of Christian doctrine. The first chapter arranges the Old English words for fear into etymologically organized families and describes their incidence and usage across attested corpus of Old English, using the Dictionary…
Descriptors: Old English, Vocabulary, Fear, Latin
Hartman, Megan E. – ProQuest LLC, 2011
My dissertation undertakes a complete study of the stress patterns, syntactic construction, and rhetorical style of hypermetric verse in Germanic alliterative poetry. This project allows me to fill a gap in the study of Germanic meter while simultaneously investigating the connection between metrical and literary scholarship. Hypermetric meter…
Descriptors: Old English, Poetry, Poets, Syntax
Yoon, Suwon – ProQuest LLC, 2011
The primary goal of the present study is to gain more insight into the phenomena of Expletive Negation. Chapter 1 starts with the observed hallmark properties of EN and theoretical backgrounds. In chapter 2, I show the pragmatic contribution of two scalar meanings of undesirability and unlikelihood. It is further shown that the base of scale…
Descriptors: Semantics, Verbs, Syntax, Language Processing