Sociolinguistic variation in morphological productivity in eighteenth-century English

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    Abstract

    This paper presents ongoing work on Säily and Suomela’s (2009) method of comparing type frequencies across subcorpora. The method is here used to study variation in the productivity of the suffixes -ness and -ity in the eighteenth-century sections of the Corpora of Early English Correspondence and of the Old Bailey Corpus (OBC). Unlike the OBC, the eighteenth-century section of the letter corpora differs from previously studied materials in that there is no significant gender difference in the productivity of -ity. The study raises methodological issues involving periodization, multiple hypothesis testing, and the need for an interactive tool. Several improvements have been implemented in a new version of our software.
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalCorpus Linguistics and Linguistic Theory
    Volume12
    Issue number1
    Pages (from-to)129-151
    Number of pages23
    ISSN1613-7027
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - May 2016
    MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

    Bibliographical note

    Special Issue: How do corpus-based techniques advance description and theory in English historical linguistics?, Guest Editors: Martin Hilpert and Hubert Cuyckens

    Fields of Science

    • 6121 Languages
    • historical sociolinguistics
    • gender variation
    • Late Modern English
    • methodology
    • morphological productivity
    • word-formation
    • nominal suffixes
    • type frequency
    • corpus linguistics
    • language change
    • 113 Computer and information sciences
    • software
    • significance testing
    • hypothesis testing
    • false discovery rate
    • permutation testing
    • accumulation curves
    • interactive visualisation

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