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El. knyga: Grammar of Names in Anglo-Saxon England: The Linguistics and Culture of the Old English Onomasticon [Oxford Scholarship Online E-books]

  • Formatas: 324 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-Jul-2014
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780198701675
  • Oxford Scholarship Online E-books
  • Kaina nežinoma
  • Formatas: 324 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-Jul-2014
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780198701675
This book examines personal names, including given and acquired (or nick-) names, and how they were used in Anglo-Saxon England. It discusses their etymologies, semantics, and grammatical behaviour, and considers their evolving place in Anglo-Saxon history and culture. From that culture survive thousands of names on coins, in manuscripts, on stone and other inscriptions. Names are important and their absence a stigma (Grendel's parents have no names); they may have particular functions in ritual and magic; they mark individuals, generally people but also beings with close human contact such as dogs, cats, birds, and horses; and they may provide indications of rank and gender.

Dr Colman explores the place of names within the structure of Old English, their derivation, formation, and other linguistic behaviour, and compares them with the products of other Germanic (e.g., Present-day German) and non-Germanic (e.g., Ancient and Present-day Greek) naming systems. Old English personal names typically followed the Germanic system of elements based on common words like leof (adjective 'beloved') and wulf (noun 'wolf'), which give Leofa and Wulf, and often combined as in Wulfraed, (ręd noun, 'advice, counsel') or as in Leofing (with the diminutive suffix -ing). The author looks at the combinatorial and sequencing possibilities of these elements in name formation, and assesses the extent to which, in origin, names may be selected to express qualities manifested by, or expected in, an individual. She examines their different modes of inflection and the variable behaviour of names classified as masculine or feminine. The results of her wide-ranging investigation are provocative and stimulating.
Preface ix
Conventions and Abbreviations xi
1 Introduction
1(20)
1.1 On the onomasticon
1(8)
1.2 Notes on the sources
9(1)
1.3 Gender and the name data
10(11)
Part I On names
2 Names as words
21(29)
2.1 On the (non-)distinctiveness of Old English personal names
21(7)
2.2 Names as nouns?
28(2)
2.3 On functions of names
30(20)
3 Names are not nouns
50(30)
3.1 Names as determiner phrases?
50(2)
3.2 Names and notional grammar
52(4)
3.3 Lexical versus functional categories
56(6)
3.4 Prototypicality and secondary categories
62(7)
3.5 Referentiality and secondary categories
69(5)
3.6 Conversion
74(4)
3.7 Ellipsis
78(2)
4 A name is a name
80(21)
4.1 Names and fixed reference / identification
80(3)
4.2 The onomasticon and the general lexicon
83(7)
4.3 Names and dictionaries
90(4)
4.4 Conclusion to Part I
94(7)
Part II Towards the Old English onomasticon
5 Old English personal name formation
101(50)
5.1 Selection of name elements
101(4)
5.2 Combination of name elements
105(13)
5.3 On `intelligibility' of Old English `compound' names
118(7)
5.4 Origins of Old English monothematic name formation
125(26)
6 General lexical formation
151(39)
6.1 Lexical formation and idioms
151(7)
6.2 Lexical formation: derivational morphology
158(11)
6.3 Morphology and the grammar
169(6)
6.4 `Complex' versus `compound' common words
175(8)
6.5 Old English lexical stress assignment
183(6)
6.6 Conclusion to general lexical formation
189(1)
7 Structures of Old English personal names
190(30)
7.1 `Complex' versus `compound' Old English names?
190(6)
7.2 Dithematic names and the Old English onomasticon
196(2)
7.3 Reduction of dithematic names
198(10)
7.4 Neutralization
208(11)
7.5 Conclusion to
Chapter 7
219(1)
8 On the role of the paradigm as a marker of lexical-item formation
220(50)
8.1 Introduction: the Old English weak suffix <a>
220(3)
8.2 The `weak ending' and its origins
223(12)
8.3 Germanic weak adjective declension
235(12)
8.4 Old English n-stem monothematic personal names (or: the <a> suffix on names)
247(15)
8.5 On so-called `propriale Markierung' as derivational morphology
262(6)
8.6 Conclusion
268(2)
9 An Old English onomasticon
270(7)
9.1 Elements in dithematic names
270(1)
9.2 Monothematic names
270(1)
9.3 Other nicknames
271(2)
9.4 Conclusion
273(1)
9.5 A sample onomasticon and its activation
274(3)
References 277(16)
Index of Authors 293(4)
Index of Personal Names 297(5)
Index of Subjects 302
Retired as Reader in English Language at the University of Edinburgh in 2002, Fran Colman continues to research and lecture on the structure and history of the English language, notably on the names and coinage of Anglo-Saxon England. She has been an invited lecturer at universities and learned societies in Australia, England, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Poland, Scotland, Spain. Her previous publications include Money Talks: Reconstructing Old English (de Gruyter Mouton, 1992), Sylloge of Coins of the British Isles: Royal Coin Cabinet Stockholm. Part V: Anglo-Saxon Coins: Edward the Confessor and Harold II, 1042-1066 (published for the British Academy by OUP and Spink and Son Ltd., 2007) and, as editor, Evidence for Old English (John Donald, 1992).