Íslenskt mál og almenn málfræði


Íslenskt mál og almenn málfræði - 01.01.1980, Side 201

Íslenskt mál og almenn málfræði - 01.01.1980, Side 201
On the Dental Accretion 199 The basic variant of the imperative singular is the long imperative. This assumption must be made in order to account for the fact that the long imperative has prevailed over all other imperative variants in the informal language, to a lesser extent in the formal language. By pre- vailing over the remaining imperative variants the long imperative has proved that it is more resistant than the remaining imperative variants against „attacks“ upon itself. Its resistance must be due to the circum- stance that the long imperative is a better linguistic sign, from the niorphological point of view, than the remaining imperative variants.* * * 7 The „bettemess“ of the long imperative is in my opinion ascribable to hs being better than the remaining imperative variants characterised as a second person singular: the suffixed þú is the most universal Icelandic 2. p. sg. ending, and as such best of all the morphological signs denotes the second person singular.8 The long imperative, which we have now established as the basic imperative variant of Icelandic (from the morphological point of view) on the evidence of its eventual rise above all other imperative variants, has been the base from which the short imperatives gradually, and at least optionally, came to be formed in the last thousand years or so in tives can only be formed from the long imperatives that end in CDu, where C = any consonant, D = t, d, or Ö\ the long imperatives kallaðu, þegiðu, etc. lack the C of the formula. 7 This Darwinian reasoning owes much to Willi Mayerthaler’s lectures at the Linguistic Society of America Summer Institute in Salzburg, 1979. 8 It is questionable whether the long imperative would win the title of the basic ímperative variant if the contest among the imperative variants were conducted on the syntactic level. In that case the contestants would include the short impera- l've + the non-suffixed þú, e. g. kalla þú. However, it never came to a contest among the imperative variants on the syntactic level: the type exemplified by kalla þú did not disappear because it was less good a linguistic sign than kallaðu, but because its integral part, the short imperative kalla, lost the battle against the long imperative kallaðu on the morphological level. (For the difference between the morphological and syntactic variants of the 2.p.sg. see footnote 3 above.) — That linguistic changes can occur within one component only of the grammar, is com- monplace: remember by way of example that sound laws can operate blindly and create highly irregular morphological forms. The psychologically real, pronounced compartmentalisation of grammars into components has been known for a long time, and has now led Wolfgang U. Dressler to posit his polyzentristische Theorie des Sprachsystems, see Dressler 1977:60 and passim.
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Íslenskt mál og almenn málfræði

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