bokomslag 'I'll Tell Thee Thou Dost Evil'
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'I'll Tell Thee Thou Dost Evil'

Martin Villwock

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  • 32 sidor
  • 2007
Scholarly Paper (Advanced Seminar) aus dem Jahr 2005 im Fachbereich Anglistik - Linguistik, Note: 1,7, Universität zu Köln (Englisches Seminar), Veranstaltung: English Grammar - synchronic and diachronic aspects, 18 Eintragungen im Literaturverzeichnis, Sprache: Englisch, Anmerkungen: Hintergrund zum You/Thou Unterschied im Early Modern English, referenzen zu Politeness. Analyse von King Lear im Hinblick auf diese Aspekte. Viel Sekundärliteratur wird benutzt. , Abstract: In Middle English and Early Modern English one could choose either You or Thou (and their respective variants see Simpson et al. 2005: entry Thou, pers., pron., 2nd sing.). Either choice carried a number of implications, depending on the period of time in the language (Barber 1976:204-210). This system, which exists in many (but predominately European) countries is generally referred to as the T/V distinction.Although similar to the German T/V distinction (Blake 1983:6), there is a phenomenon in Early Modern English, particularly in Shakespeare's plays, which sets the You/Thou distinction apart. Whereas in German, French or Italian, it would be very rare and even rude to switch back and forth from T to V or the other way around, this must have happened quite frequently in Early Modern English dialogues (Brown and Gilman 1960:274-275). Eventually, of course, the use of Thou declined leaving the English language with only one second person pronoun, serving all cases without alteration (except possessive Yours and determiner Your) and both singular and plural (Görlach 1991:85).A speaker of Early Modern English consequently had not only the option of choosing T or V once, he or she could also switch within a conversation, sometimes within a single utterance. The choice then would carry certain implications, about the emotions of the speaker, about his fondness or dislike of the addressee, or about the social ranks of both addresser and addressee. As a result, choosing the pronoun became a tool in dialogues that could be used to acknowledge or insult.The T/V distinction will be discussed, its appearance in Early Modern English and particularly Shakespeare's language. Then, in order to attain an achievable amount of research for a paper of this size, one of Shakespeare's plays will be regarded with some detail. The choice fell on King Lear...
  • Författare: Martin Villwock
  • Format: Pocket/Paperback
  • ISBN: 9783638861991
  • Språk: Engelska
  • Antal sidor: 32
  • Utgivningsdatum: 2007-11-01
  • Förlag: Grin Publishing