Research Paper (undergraduate) from the year 2004 in the subject English
Language and Literature Studies - Linguistics, grade: 1,3, Free
University of Berlin (Anglistik), language: English, abstract: The
famous dictum, "grammars code best what speakers do most" coined by Du
Bois, is a central postulate of all discourse-based approaches to
grammaticalization (also known as grammaticization, grammatization). It
points to the assumption that frequent repetition in discourse plays a
crucial role in the development of grammatical forms, and that basicness
is an inherent characteristics of most source concepts. There is only a
limited number of lexical items likely to be sources for
grammaticalization. Since verbs form the core element of every sentence,
expressing different conditions such as states, changes and activities,
they provide a rich source for grammatical targets. So how do verbs
serve as a source of grammatical change? This academic paper gives
answers to this question, discussing the grammaticalization of verbs,
and how verbs typically evolve into prepositions, aspectual as well as
quotative markers, and complementizers. Evidence is taken not only from
English, but also from, i.a., Chinese, German, Spanish, French and
African languages.