What is grammaticalization?
Process where lexical(content) words gradually become grammatical forms and lose concrete meaning.
What happens first in grammaticalization?
A word is used in a specific context
What does "let me" reduce to in fast speech?
lemme
What is a cline?
A gradual pathway of change from lexical to grammatical forms.
What is complementizer?
A word that introduces a subordinate clause.
What is a content word?
A word that carries real meaning, such as nouns, verbs, adjectives (e.g., book, run, green).
Semantic bleaching?
The process where a word loses its original, concrete meaning and becomes more abstract.
In "I will go" vs "I’m going to go," which one shows grammaticalization and why?
"going to" (because it developed from a lexical verb)
Direction of change?
From lexical (content) → grammatical.
Origin of complementizers?
Often from verbs like “say” or similar lexical sources.
What is a function word?
A word that expresses grammatical relationships, not concrete meaning (e.g., the, of, and).
Reanalysis?
A change in how speakers interpret the structure of a sentence
Give an example of semantic bleaching in English
The word “will” originally meant ‘to want’ or ‘to wish’ in Old English. Over time, this strong lexical meaning weakened, and “will” became a marker of future tense (e.g., “I will go”). The original sense of desire is mostly lost in modern usage, showing how semantic content becomes reduced during grammaticalization.
What is Persistence?
The original meaning still influences the new grammatical meaning.
Why “bé” is no longer a verb?
Because it cannot take normal verb markers (tense, person) and only functions as a connector.
Difference between content and function words?
Content words have lexical meaning; function words serve grammatical roles and connect elements in a sentence.
Correct order of steps?
Context → inference → reanalysis → phonological reduction → coexistence.
Give an example of phonological reduction linked to grammaticalization.
The form “going to” is often reduced in speech to “gonna.” This reduction shows how frequent grammatical forms lose phonetic substance over time. The shorter form is easier to pronounce and reflects the shift from a full lexical construction to a more grammaticalized, auxiliary-like element.
Why does grammaticalization usually happen in only one direction?
Because words tend to lose meaning and become more grammatical, not the opposite.
What is the difference between a complementizer and a normal verb?
A verb expresses action or meaning
A complementizer only connects clauses and has no real lexical meaning
Why do function words often come from content words?
Because through grammaticalization, content words gradually lose meaning and become grammatical markers.
explain "going to" change
Originally: movement (I am going somewhere)
New meaning inferred: future
Reanalysis: "going to" becomes a future marker
Reduction: "gonna"
Both meanings still exist today
Give an example of divergence from a single lexical source.
The verb “go” demonstrates divergence because it still exists as a full lexical verb meaning movement (e.g., “I go to school”), while also appearing in the grammaticalized construction “going to” as a future marker. This shows how one original form can split into two paths: one lexical and one grammatical.
500
Explain difference between bleaching and persistence?
Semantic bleaching = meaning is reduced
Persistence = some traces of original meaning remain
Explain why "gonna" is considered more grammatical than "going to".
It is more reduced (phonological reduction)
It has lost original meaning of movement
It functions mainly as a grammatical future marker