This article investigates the historical emergence of postverbal negation in Welsh. Welsh undergoes a shift from preverbal negation (Middle Welsh ny(t)) to postverbal negation (Present-day Welsh ddim “not” < Middle Welsh dim “at all” < dim “thing, anything”) (Jespersen’s Cycle). In Middle Welsh, ddim occupies a late clausal position, but it later undergoes a syntactic reanalysis which moves it to an earlier immediately post-subject position. It also shifts in status from a weak negative polarity item, appearing in interrogative, conditional and negative clauses, to a purely negative particle. The article argues that, when ddim begins to occupy an earlier clausal position around 1600, it becomes phonologically less salient, and subsequently loses its emphatic sense in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Finally, the article considers the loss of the preverbal negative marker ni(d) in spoken Welsh, and whether this can best be understood as a push chain (ddim makes ni(d) unnecessary) or as a pull chain (ni(d) is phonologically weak and needs reinforcing by ddim). It concludes that push-chain explanations are most probable for the earlier part of the development up to 1750, with pull-chain explanations being more convincing thereafter.
2019. Dialect syntax as a testbed for models of innovation and change: Modals and negative concord in the <i>Syntactic Atlas of Welsh Dialects</i>. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 4:1
2018. Negative Indefinites in the history of Portuguese : the case of <em>nemigalha</em>. Estudos de Lingüística Galega► pp. 107 ff.
Pinto, Clara
2020. Polarity, expression of degree and negation: the vernacular form <i>caraças</i>. Estudos de Lingüística Galega 12 ► pp. 115 ff.
Salmons, Joseph & Huibin Zhuang
2018. The diachrony of East Asian prosodic templates. Linguistics 56:3 ► pp. 549 ff.
Burke, Isabelle Grace
2014. ‘Giving a Rat's’ about Negation: The Jespersen Cycle in Modern Australian English. Australian Journal of Linguistics 34:4 ► pp. 453 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 6 september 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
Any errors therein should be reported to them.