Historical predictions Sample Clauses

Historical predictions. Testing the two predictions for earlier stages of the Germanic languages is made difficult both by the scarcity of evidence and by the fact that the evidence that does exist is not always unambiguous. It seems that the older languages fall into three groups: Languages with no predicative adjective agreement, e.g. Middle Dutch (Xxxxxxxx 1993:248) and Old Frisian (Xxxxxx 1981:169). As these languages are always taken to be OV- languages, this is as expected. Languages where predicative adjectives do not show any agreement in the majority of the cases, e.g. Old English (Xxxxxxx 1965:236, Xxxxxxxx 1985:62), Old High German (Xxxx 1917:164, Penzl 1986:55), and Middle High German (Xxxx 1998:360, Penzl 1989:82). If this is taken as evidence that predicative adjectives do not agree, then this is as expected, as these languages are commonly taken to be OV-languages. If, however, this is taken to show that some varieties/dialects of the three languages did have predicative adjective agreement, then this is unexpected. And finally, the third group of older Germanic languages is languages where predicative adjectives do show agreement, e.g. Old Norse (Xxxxxxx 1905:68) and Gothic (Xxxxxx 1956:74). This is not unexpected for Old Norse, if x.x. Xxxxxxx (1905:357-358) and Xxxxxxxxxxxx (1999:318-319) are right that Old Norse was a VO-language, like the modern Scandinavian languages (contra Xxxxxxxx 1990:110, who takes Old Norse to be non- configurational). It is, however, rather unexpected for Gothic, at least if Xxxxxxxxxx (1995:22), Xxxxxxxxx (1997:7, 34) and references cited there are right that Gothic was an OV-language (This last remark also goes for Latin: Like Gothic, it has predicative adjective agreement but it is most commonly assumed to be an OV-language). Summing up, the data that go against the predictions made are that Old and Middle High German show predicative adjective agreement in some cases, and that Gothic always show predicative adjective agreement.
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