Directional forces in the evolution of grammar

10/16/2021
by   Shimpei Okuda, et al.
0

Languages have diverse characteristics that have emerged through evolution. In modern English grammar, the perfect is formed with have+PP (past participle), but in older English the be+PP form existed as well. It is widely recognised that the auxiliary verb BE was replaced by HAVE throughout evolution, except in several exceptional cases. However, prior studies have not clarified the evolutionary factors behind this phenomenon. In this study, we combined three large-scale corpora of English (Early English Books Online, Corpora of Historical American English, and Google Books) and analysed them to illuminate the factors that drove the evolution of the perfect in English. Our results provide important insights into the evolution of grammar. We found that most intransitive verbs exhibited an increase in the frequency of have+PP, some of which passed the Frequency Increment Test (FIT), indicating a rapid S-shape increase. This finding strongly suggests that the perfect could have evolved through natural selection rather than random drift.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
04/19/2022

Co-evolutionary Probabilistic Structured Grammatical Evolution

This work proposes an extension to Structured Grammatical Evolution (SGE...
research
08/02/2016

Evolutionary forces in language change

Languages and genes are both transmitted from generation to generation, ...
research
08/11/2022

Language-independence of DisCoCirc's Text Circuits: English and Urdu

DisCoCirc is a newly proposed framework for representing the grammar and...
research
04/11/2019

Modeling the Complexity and Descriptive Adequacy of Construction Grammars

This paper uses the Minimum Description Length paradigm to model the com...
research
07/28/2020

How to Investigate the Historical Roots and Evolution of Research Fields in China? A Case Study on iMetrics Using RootCite

This paper aimed to provide an approach to investigate the historical ro...
research
05/24/2022

A Paradigm Change for Formal Syntax: Computational Algorithms in the Grammar of English

Language sciences rely less and less on formal syntax as their base. The...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset