Olga Fischer’s scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


The status of the postposed ‘ and -adjective’ construction in Old English: attributive or predicative?
  • Chapter

December 2011

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8 Citations

Olga Fischer

Is historical linguistics different in principle from other linguistic research? This book addresses problems encountered in gathering and analysing data from early English, including the incomplete nature of the evidence and the dangers of misinterpretation or over-interpretation. Even so, gaps in the data can sometimes be filled. The volume brings together a team of leading English historical linguists who have encountered such issues first-hand, to discuss and suggest solutions to a range of problems in the phonology, syntax, dialectology and onomastics of older English. The topics extend widely over the history of English, chronologically and linguistically, and include Anglo-Saxon naming practices, the phonology of the alliterative line, computational measurement of dialect similarity, dialect levelling and enregisterment in late Modern English, stress-timing in English phonology and the syntax of Old and early Modern English. The book will be of particular interest to researchers and students in English historical linguistics.

Citations (1)


... Less attention has been paid to word order within noun phrases, even though they, too, display a change from flexible to firm word order. There are exceptions, such as Demske (2001), Allen (2012), Breban (2012), Vartiainen (2012), Börjars et al. (2016), but these focus on the development of the determiner system rather than word order; Fischer (2000Fischer ( , 2001Fischer ( , 2006Fischer ( , 2012, Haumann (2003Haumann ( , 2010, Bech (2019) for Old English, Bech (2017) for Old Norwegian and Old English, and Tiemann (2024 [this volume]) for Old Norwegian, and for an overview of modifier order in early Germanic based on the literature, see Ratkus (2011: §4.4). ...

Reference:

Chapter 3 Noun phrase modifiers in early Germanic: A comparative corpus study of Old English, Old High German, Old Icelandic, and Old Saxon
The status of the postposed ‘ and -adjective’ construction in Old English: attributive or predicative?
  • Citing Chapter
  • December 2011