Pronouns and Word Order in Old English: With Particular Reference to the Indefinite Pronoun Man

Chapter 1: Introduction 1.1 Aims and Structure of the thesis 1.2 Pronouns and Studies on Old English word order 1.3 On electronic resources 1.4 Some notes on data and examples 1.5 Preliminaries on theory Chapter 2: Topicalisation and (non-)inversion 2.1 Introduction 2.2 The Helsinki Corpus 2.3 Negation 2.4 Subjunctives 2.5 Cura Pastoralis and the works of AElfric 2.6 Counter-examples Chapter 3: Other aspects of word order in relation to man 3.1 The problem 3.2 Separability from the subordinator 3.3 Inversion 3.4 Preceding object pronouns 3.5 Genuinely mixed categories? Chapter 4: On the status of man and personal pronouns 4.1 Introduction 4.2 Word classes treated as clitics in analyses of Old English 4.2.1 Personal Pronouns 4.2.2 Adverbs 4.2.3 Paer 4.3 Man as clitic 4.4 Contra a weak pronoun analysis Chapter 5: Topics in Old English clause structure 5.1 Introduction 5.2 Clause structure and clitic placement 5.2.1 van Kemenade (1987) 5.2.2 Pintzuk (1991, 1996) 5.2.3 Kiparsky (1995, 1996) 5.2.4 van Kemenade (1998), Hulk and van Kemenade (1997) 5.2.5 Kroch and Taylor (1997) 5.3 Topicalisation in subordinate clauses 5.4 Inversion of pronominal subjects in clauses with topicalisation Chapter 6: Conclusion Bibliography