Preposition Placement in English
Preposition placement, the competition between preposition stranding (What is he talking about?) and pied-piping (About what is he talking?), is one of the most interesting areas of syntactic variation in English. This is the first book to investigate preposition placement across all types of clauses that license it, such as questions, exclamations and wh-clauses, and those which exhibit categorical stranding, such as non-wh relative clauses, comparatives, and passives. Drawing on over 100 authentic examples from both first-language (English) and second-language (Kenyan) data, it combines experimental and corpus-based approaches to provide a full grammatical account of preposition placement in both varieties of English. Although written within the usage-based construction grammar framework, the results are presented in theory-neutral terminology, making them accessible to researchers from all syntactic schools. This pioneering volume will be of interest not only to syntacticians, but also second-language researchers and those working on variation in English.
- The first study that empirically investigates preposition placement across all clause types
- The study compares first-language (British English) and second-language (Kenyan English) data and will therefore appeal to readers interested in world Englishes
- Over 100 authentic corpus examples are discussed in the text, which will appeal to those who want to see 'real data'
Reviews & endorsements
'… Hoffmann's book is a pleasure to read and the arguments are easy to follow. I recommend it highly to anyone who has ever wondered about preposition placement in English.' Hans C. Boas, English World-Wide
Product details
July 2014Paperback
9781107631731
318 pages
229 × 152 × 17 mm
0.43kg
59 b/w illus. 56 tables
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Data and methodology
- 3. Case notes: independent factors
- 4. Evidence I: corpus results
- 5. Evidence II: experimental results
- 6. Preposition placement: the case for a construction grammar account
- 7. Conclusion: the verdict.