Abstract

AbstractThis paper discusses the emergence and development of a mirative constructional network involving the shell nounswonder,marvelandchance, called ‘wonder’ nouns here. In combination with negative quantifiers (e.g.no wonder), they can be used either lexically or as part of grammatical, mirative markers, qualifying a proposition as unsurprising in view of another situation. The network emerges in Old English aroundwonder, with three meso-constructions which differ in surface structure but all inherit the anti-concessive discourse schema from the macro-construction, consisting of a proposition, mirative qualifier and justification. Two additional meso-constructions emerge in Middle English, which is also the time when the Romance loanmarveljoins the network, making it gain in schematicity, abstractness and productivity. In Present-day English, another Romance loan,chance, expands the mirative network even more. Throughout time, we observe node loss, node creation, constructional substitution and changes in frequencies of constructions. Theoretically, we propose a semiotic approach to diachronic construction grammar, arguing that multi-sign constructions invariably involve syntagmatic relations, which are themselves form-meaning pairings. This approach allows us to capture generalizations which would otherwise be missed.

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