Synchronic variation and loss of case: Formal and informal language in a Dutch corpus of 17th-century Amsterdam texts
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2013
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Abstract
A bias towards formal texts obscures our view of language change and gives a misleading impression of actual developments if ‘changes from below’ are in conflict with ‘changes from above,’ resulting from norms that are visible in particular in formal language. A corpus of 17th-century Amsterdam texts with varying levels of formality is assembled to study the loss of genitive and dative case-marking in Dutch. These results are compared with the use of present par- ticiple constructions, which serve as an extra variable to gauge how formal a text is. We argue that nominal case-marking no longer existed in informal language in 17th-century Amsterdam and that the genitive became a feature of formal norms and was hence subject to pressures from above.
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Weerman, F P, Olson, M J & Cloutier, R 2013, 'Synchronic variation and loss of case: Formal and informal language in a Dutch corpus of 17th-century Amsterdam texts', Diachronica, vol. 30, no. 3, 3, pp. 353-381. https://doi.org/10.1075/dia.30.3.03wee