Some as an indefinite article in Present Day English: a case of paradigmatization and constructional competition

Lotte Sommerer*, Florent Perek

*Corresponding author for this work

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Abstract

This paper investigates the different functions of some in Present Day English. It especially focuses on whether and to what extent some functions as an indefinite article for non-count and plural nouns and as such competes with the bare marking strategy (I need to buy some milk/some cigarettes vs. I need to buy milk/cigarettes). It is shown that next to being a quantifier, some has grammaticalized into an article-like element. On the basis of a sample of direct object NPs extracted from the British National Corpus (XML Edition), we analyze singular, plural and non-count NPs functioning as syntactic objects which either occur bare or have some as a determiner. One question is how often and in which constructional environments some functions as a so-called ‘near-article’ and which other functions it fulfills (e.g. partitive or vagueness marker). The results of a multinomial logistic regression model are used to discuss which grammatical factors are correlated with the use of some as an existential marker of indefiniteness. We then investigate the potential factors predicting speakers’ choice between using some as an overt near-article or leaving the nominal bare in indefinite NPs (i.e. zero article), by means of binomial logistic regression. Theoretically, this paper contributes to the study of such mechanisms as paradigmatization, analogization and constructional competition within a usage-based, constructional model of language and its change.
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages25
JournalFunctions of Language
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 1 Sept 2023

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Not yet published as of 08/10/2024.

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