cognitive processes in grammaticalization - bybee
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Cognitive processes in grammaticalization
Joan Bybee
University of New Mexico
All of linguistic theory is concerned with the enterprise of elucidating the natureof the grammar of human languages. But along with asking the uestion !what is the
nature of grammar"#$ we can also ask !how do languages acuire grammar"#. %n the last
twenty years$ researchers interested in the latter uestion have elaborated a theory ofgrammaticali&ation$ the process by which grammar is created$ and in doing so have also
come up with some interesting new perspectives on the former uestion. ' (our main
findings of this research are listed here)
*rammar is not a static$ closed or self+contained system$ but is highly susceptible
to change and highly affected by language use. ,he loss of grammar is generally
acknowledged and often lamented by prescriptive grammarians$ who mourn the loss of
the distinction between who and whom but fail to re-oice in the creation of new grammar$such as the new future tense signaled by gonna. %n fact$ the creation of new grammatical
morphemes and structures is as common as the loss of old ones.
nce underway$ the course of grammaticali&ation is unidirectional and thus in
principle predictable. Nouns and verbs lose their categorical status and become prepositions$ auxiliaries and other grammatical forms. (ree elements become more
restricted and fuse with other elements. /oosely con-oined main clauses fuse to become a
main plus subordinate clause. ,he reverse directions are rarely attested.
Both the general trends in grammaticali&ation and many of the very specific
developments are not restricted to individual languages$ but are common acrossgenetically and geographically unrelated languages. ,his widespread distribution$ whichwill be illustrated in section 0$ provides a new view of language universals. 1ince patterns
of change cannot in themselves exist in speakers# minds$ the more basic universals must
be the mechanisms that create the changes that are so similar across languages.
Many of the very basic mechanisms that constitute the process of
grammaticali&ation are cognitive processes that are not necessarily restricted to language.
By better understanding these cognitive processes and how they function incommunicative situations$ we will eventually learn the answers to the most fundamental
uestions that linguists ask.
1. Grammaticalization
*rammaticali&ation is usually defined as the process by which a lexical item or aseuence of items becomes a grammatical morpheme$ changing its distribution and
function in the process 2Meillet '3'0$ /ehmann '340$ 5eine and 6eh '347$ 5eine$
8laudi and 59nnemeyer '33'$ 5opper and ,raugott '33:;. ,hus <nglish going to
' ,he terms grammaticali&ation and grammatici&ation are used interchangeably.
'
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becomes the intention=future marker gonna. 5owever$ more recently it has been observed
that it is important to add that grammaticali&ation of lexical items takes place within
>A6,%8U/A6 8N1,6U8,%N1 and further that grammaticali&ation is the creation of newconstructions 2Bybee$ to appear$ ,raugott$ to appear;. ,hus going to does not
grammaticali&e in the construction exemplified by I’m going to the store but only in the
construction in which a verb follows to$ as in I’m going to help you. %fgrammaticali&ation is the creation of new constructions 2and their further development;$
then it also can include cases of change that do not involve specific morphemes$ such as
the creation of word order patterns.
(or illustration let us consider the canonical type of grammaticali&ation$ that in
which a lexical item becomes a grammatical morpheme within a particular construction.
<xamining the details will help us understand what cognitive mechanisms are involved inthe process. 1ome characteristics of the grammaticali&ation process are the following)
2'; ?ords and phrases undergoing grammaticali&ation are phonetically reduced$ with
reductions$ assimilations and deletions of consonants and vowels producing seuencesthat reuire less muscular effort 2Browman and *oldstein '330$ Mowrey and >agliuca
'33@;. (or example$ going to becomes gonnaand even reduces further in
some contexts to as in I'm (g)onna
20; 1pecific$ concrete meanings entering into the process become generali&ed and moreabstract$ and as a result$ become appropriate in a growing range of contexts$ as for
example$ the uses of be going to in sentences 2'; through 2:;. ,he literal meaning in 2';
was the only possible interpretation in 1hakespeares <nglish$ but now uses such as those
shown in 20; and 2:; are common.
2'; movement)We are going to Windsor to see the King 20; intention) We are going to get married in June.2:; future) These trees are going to lose their leaves.
2:; A grammaticali&ing construction#s freuency of use increases dramatically as it
develops. ne source of the increased freuency is an increase in the types of contexts in
which the new construction is possible. ,hus when be going to had only its literalmeaning 2as in 'C;$ it could only be used in contexts where movement was to take place$
with sub-ects that were volitional and mobile. Now it can be used even in 2:;$ where no
movement in space on the part of the sub-ect is implied$ or indeed possible. As the gonna
construction becomes appropriate with more types of sub-ects and verbs$ it occurs morefreuently in texts.
27; 8hanges in grammaticali&ation take place very gradually and are accompanied bymuch variation in both form and function. % have already illustrated the variation in form
with be going to and gonna. Dariation in function can be seen in the three examples
above$ of movement$ intention and future$ all of which are still possible uses inModern <nglish.
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,he mechanisms underlying these changes will be the main focus of this chapter$ but
before examining these in greater detail$ it is important to document the fact thatgrammaticali&ation occurs spontaneously and in the same form at all documented time
periods and in all languages.
2. General patterns of grammaticalization
/et us first list some changes that have occurred in the <nglish language over thelast millenium. 1ince <nglish began to appear in writing some '0EE years ago$ we can
document the development of the definite article$ the, out of the demonstrative$ that $ and
the development of the indefinite article aan out of the numeral one. ,he function of
articles such as the and a is to distinguish between nouns that the hearer can identify asalready known in the discourse or conversational context and those that are being
introduced for the first time. 2(or example$ I met a man at the ban!... where this is the
first mention of a man vs. The man I met at the ban!... which refers back to some
previous mention.; ld <nglish 2as documented in manuscripts from about 4EE+''EE AF;used no articles at all$ but rather could change the position of nouns to show which were
new and which were previously mentioned.
1imilarly$ the <nglish modal auxiliaries$ which express grammatical distinctions
within the categories of tense 2future will ; and modalities such as possibility 2"an and
may;$ all developed from verbs. Will $ which now indicates future tense$ developed from a
verb$ willan$ which meant to wantG "an came from a verb$ "unnan$ meaning to be
acuainted with or to know how toG may came from a verb$ magan$ meaning to be able
to$ to have the power. #ould and might developed from the past tense forms of "unnan and magan respectively. ?e have already mentioned the more complex phrase be going
to$ which in 1hakespeares <nglish still described actual movement in space$ fuses into
gonna and comes to be used for future time reference.
<ven affixes derive from full words. (or instance$ the <nglish suffix $ly derived
from a noun$ which in ld <nglish was li%$ meaning body. ,he compound mann$li% originally meant having the body or appearance of a man whence it generali&ed to
having the characteristics of a man$ the modern sense of manly.
,hese facts of <nglish are interesting enough as isolated facts about one language$ but they develop a profound importance with the discovery that all around the world$ in
languages that are not related genetically or geographically$ we find analogous examples)
definite articles developing from demonstratives$ indefinite articles from the numeralone$ future tenses from verbs meaning want or go to and auxiliaries indicating
possibility and permission from verbs meaning know and be able.
(or instance$ in many <uropean languages$ an indefinite article has developed out
of the numeral one) <nglish aan$ *erman ein$ (rench unune, 1panish ununa$ and
Modern *reek ena. ?hile these are all %ndo+<uropean languages$ in each case this
development occurred after these languages had differentiated from one another and
:
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speakers were no longer in contact. (urthermore$ the numeral !one# is used as an
indefinite article in MorH$ a *ur language of the Burkina (aso 25eine et al. '33:;$ in
collouial 5ebrew 21emitic; and in the Fravidian languages ,amil and Iannada 25eine'33;. <xamples of demonstratives becoming definite articles are also common) /atin
ille, illa that became (rench definite articles le, la and 1panish el, la& in Dai 2a Mande
language of /iberia and 1ierra /eone; the demonstrative
this becomes a suffixeddefinite article 25eine et al. '33:;.
>arallel to <nglish will $ a verb meaning want becomes a future marker inBulgarian$ 6umanian and 1erbo+8roatian$ as well as in the Bantu languages of AfricaK
Mabiha$ myene and 1wahili 2Bybee and >agliuca '34$ 5eine et al. '33:;. >arallel to
<nglish "an from to know$ Baluchi 2%ndo+%ranian;$ Fanish 2*ermanic;$ Motu 2>apuaAustronesian;$ Mwera 2Bantu; and Nung 2,ibeto+Burman; use a verb meaning know for
the expression of ability 2Bybee$ >erkins and >agliuca '337;. ,ok >isin$ a creole
language of New *uinea$ uses !n 2from <nglish "an; for ability and also savi from the>ortuguese save he knows for ability. /atin L potere or possum to be able gives (rench
pouvoir and 1panish poder $ both meaning can as auxiliaries and power as nouns. ,hesewords parallel <nglish may ( and past tense might ; , which earlier meant have the physical
power to do something. Derbs or phrases indicating movement towards a goal2comparable to <nglish be going to; freuently become future markers around the world$
found in languages such as (rench and 1panish but also in languages spoken in Africa$
the Americas$ Asia and the >acific 2Bybee and >agliuca '34$ Bybee et al. '337;.
f course$ not all grammaticali&ation paths can be illustrated with <nglish
examples. ,here are also common developments that do not happen to occur in <nglish.(or instance$ a completive or perfect marker 2meaning have -ustC done; develops from a
verb meaning finish in Bantu languages$ as well as in languages as diverse as 8ocama
and ,ucano 2both Andean+<uatorial;$ Ioho 2Mon+Ihmer;$ Buli 2Malayo+>olynesian;$,em and <ngenni 2both Niger+8ongo;$ /ao 2Iam+,ai;$ 5aka and /ahu 2,ibeto+Burman;$8antonese and ,ok >isin 2Bybee et al. '337$ 5eine and 6eh '347;. %n addition$ the same
development from the verb finish has been recorded for American 1ign /anguage$
showing that grammaticali&ation takes place in signed languages the same way as it doesin spoken languages 2Jan&en '33@;.
(or several of these developments % have cited the creole language$ ,ok >isin$ avaiety of Melanesian >idgin <nglish$ which is now the official language of >apua New
*uinea. >idgin languages are originally trade or plantation languages which develop in
situations where speakers of several different languages must interact$ though they share
no common language. At first$ pidgins have no grammatical constructions or categories$ but as they are used in wider contexts and by more people more often$ they begin to
develop grammar. nce such languages come to be used by children as their first
language$ and thus are designated as creole languages$ the development of grammarflowers even more. ,he fact that the grammars of pidgin and creole languages are very
similar in form$ even among pidgins that developed in geographically distant places by
speakers of diverse languages$ has been taken by Bickerton '34' to be strong evidencefor innate language universals. 5owever$ studies of the way in which grammar develops
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in such languages reveals that the process is the same as the grammaticali&ation process
in more established languages 26omaine '33@$ 1ankoff '33E;.
3. Paths of change and synchronic patterns
,he picture that emerges from the examination of these and the numerous otherdocumented cases of grammaticali&ation is that there are several highly constrained and
specifiable grammati"aliation paths which lead to the development of new grammatical
constructions. 1uch paths are universal in the sense that development along them occursindependently in unrelated languages. (or instance$ the two most common paths for the
development of future tense morphemes in the languages of the world are the following)
27; ,he Movement >ath
movement towards a goal intention future
2@; ,he Dolition >ath
volition or desire intention future
,he first path is exemplified by the development of be going to and the second by will .
New developments along such paths may begin at any time in a languages
history. %n any language we look at$ we find old constructions that are near the end of
such a path$ as well as new constructions that are -ust beginning their evolution and
constructions midway along. *rammar is constantly being created and lost along suchspecifiable and universal tra-ectories.
Fevelopment along the Movement >ath begins when a verb or phrase meaningmovement towards a goal comes to be used with a verb) as in They are going to Windsor
to see the King. At first$ the meaning is primarily spatial$ but a strong inference of
intention is also present. 2Why are they going to Windsor To see the King .; ,he intentionmeaning can become primary$ and from that$ one can infer future actions) *e's going to
(gonna) buy a house can state an intention or make a prediction about future actions.
1uch developments are slow and gradual$ and a grammatici&ing construction onsuch a path will span a portion of it at any given time. ,hus$ <nglish be going to in
1hakespeares time could express both the change of location sense and the intention
sense. %n Modern <nglish$ the intention sense is still present$ but the future sense is also possible$ with no intention or movement implied 2That tree is going to lose its leaves). As
a result of the gradualness of change$ and the fact that in any particular language a future
morpheme might be anywhere on one of these paths$ there is considerable cross+linguisticvariation in the meaning and range of use of a future morpheme at any particular
synchronic period.
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8onsidering -ust synchronic states$ then$ it is extremely difficult to formulate
universals of tense$ or even to give a universal meaning to future that would be valid
across all languages. %ndeed in the '3@Es and '3Es it was common for linguists toexclaim that any attempt to find universals of grammatical meaning would be futile and
ethnocentric 28homsky '3@$ ?einreich '3:;. Now there are attempts to formulate the
innate universals of tense and aspect 21mith '33';$ but it is very difficult to find a smallset of features that accommodate all the cross+linguistic variation in the area of tense and
aspect.
8omparing grammatical categories across languages from only a synchronic
perspective is something like comparing an acorn to an oak tree) they appear to have
distinct and unrelated properties. nly when we observe these entities across the
temporal dimension do we see the relationship between them. 1imilarly with grammaticalcategories and constructions) new relationships are observable when we take into account
where particular grammatical constructions and categories come from and where they are
going.
,he examination of the grammaticali&ation process across many grammatical
domains and many different languages makes it clear that the true language universals areuniversals of change. At one level$ these universals can be stated as paths of change$ such
as those in 27; and 2@;. ,o understand grammar more fully$ however$ we must look behind
these paths of change to the actual mechanisms that cause change and then seek tounderstand these mechanisms in terms of more basic cognitive and interactive processes.
%f we are successful$ we will begin to understand how human language acuires grammar.
4. Conceptual sources for grammatical material
,he examples discussed in the preceding sections showed lexical items entering into
the grammaticali&ation process. ne of the ma-or cross+linguistic similarities noted in the previous section is that the same or very similar lexical meanings tend to grammaticali&e
in unrelated languages. f all the tens of thousands of words in a language$ only a small
set are candidates for participation in the grammaticali&ation process. Are there anygenerali&ations that could be made concerning the members of this set"
6esearchers in this area have made some interesting observations about the lexical
items that are candidates for grammaticali&ation. 5eine et al. '33' have observed that theterms in this set are largely culturally independent$ that is$ universal to human experience.
(urthermore$ they represent concrete and basic aspects of human relations with the
environment$ with a strong emphasis on the spatial environment$ including parts of thehuman body. ,hus we find terms for movement in space$ such as !come# and !go# in
future constructions$ postures such as !sit$# !stand# and !lie# in progressive constructions.
,he relationship in space between one ob-ect and another is freuently expressed in termsof a human body part#s relation to the rest of the body. ,hus the noun for !head# evolves
into a preposition meaning !on top of$# !top# or !on.# !Back# is used for !in back of#
2<nglish provides an example of this derivation;$ !face# for !in front of$# !buttock# or
!anus# for !under$# and !belly# or !stomach# for !in# 25eine et al. '33')'0+':';. %n a
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survey of such relational terms in '0@ African languages$ 5eine et al. found that more
than three uarters of the terms whose etymology was known were derived from human
body parts. 1vorou '33:$ using a sample representative of all the language families of theworld$ also finds human body parts to be the most freuent sources of relational terms. 0
/ess concrete$ but nonetheless basic and culturally independent$ notions such as volition$
obligation$ and having knowledge or power also enter into the grammaticali&ation process.
,he relation between locational terms and abstract grammatical concepts has beenrecogni&ed for several decades. Anderson '3' proposes a theory of grammatical cases
2nominative$ accusative$ dative$ etc.; based on spatial relations. ,hus a relational term
meaning !towards# further develops to mean !to# whence it can become a dative marker 2 I
gave the boo! to John) or can even further develop into an accusative 2as in 1panish) +i a Juan !% saw John#;. r$ with a verb$ !to# can signal purpose and eventually generali&e to
an infinitive marker 25aspelmath '343;. ,hus even the most abstract of grammatical
notions can be traced back to a very concrete$ often physical or locational concept
involving the movement and orientation of the human body in space.
Another important observation about the lexical items found in grammaticali&ingconstructions is that they are themselves already highly generali&ed in meaning. ,hus
among motion verbs$ go and come are the most general in meaning$ incorporating only
movement and directionality and not manner 2that is$ the more specific$ saunter$ waddleor run do not grammaticali&e$ though in some cases the most basic form of human
locomotion walk does grammaticali&e;. Among stative verbs$ it is be and have that
grammaticali&e$ and for active verbs$ the most generali&ed$ do 2Bybee et al. '337;.
,he claim here is not that the abstract concepts are forever linked to the more
concrete$ only that they have their diachronic source in the very concrete physical
experience. *rammatical constructions and the concepts they represent becomeemancipated from the concrete 2see section .'; and come to express purely abstract
notions$ such as tense$ case relations$ definiteness$ etc. %t is important to note$ however$
that the sources for grammar are concepts and words drawn from the most concrete and basic aspects of human experience.
5. Grammaticalization as automatization
1ome recent studies of grammatici&ation have emphasi&ed the point that
grammatici&ation is the process of automati&ation of freuently+occurring seuences of
linguistic elements 2Boyland '33$ 5aiman '337$ Bybee$ to appear;. Boyland '33 points out that the changes in form that occur in the grammatici&ation process closely
resemble changes that occur as non+linguistic skills are practiced and become
automati&ed. ?ith repetition$ seuences of units that were previously independent cometo be processed as a single unit or chunk. ,his repackaging has two conseuences) the
identity of the component units is gradually lost$ and the whole chunk begins to reduce in
form. ,hese basic principles of automati&ation apply to all kinds of motor activities)
0 ,he other freuent sources for relational terms are the body parts of livestock and landmarks.
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playing a musical instrument$ playing a sport$ stirring pancake batter. ,hey also apply to
grammatici&ation. A phrase such as 2 I'm) going to ( +- ) which has been freuently used
over the last couple of centuries$ has been repackaged as a single processing unit. ,heidentity of the component parts is lost 2children are often surprised to see that gonna is
actually spelled going to;$ and the form is substantially reduced. ,he same applies to all
cases of grammatici&ation.:
%t follows then that grammatical constructions of all types are automati&ed motor
routines and subroutines that can be strung together or embedded in one another to produce fluent speech. ,his conclusion$ arrived at from the study of linguistic data$ is
similar to the proposal of Iimura '33$ '33:$ who argues on the basis of
neuropsychological data for a strong association between grammar and motor skill 2see
also /ieberman '347;. 5owever$ grammar is not -ust motor activity$ but motor activityappropriate to$ and meaningful in$ specific contexts. ,hus it is important to pursue the
uestion of how motor activities and meaning associate to make grammar.
5aiman '337$ '334 notes that the chunking and reduction features of thegrammatici&ation process bear a resemblance to non+linguistic rituali&ed behavior$ citing
rituals in both human and non+human species which show chunking and reduction inform. %n addition$ 5aiman cites two other characteristics of rituali&ed behavior that apply
to grammatici&ation. (irst$ repeated practices lead to habituation$ the process by which
an organism ceases to respond at the same level to a repeated stimulus. A repeated wordor phrase tends to lose much of its semantic force 2consider the loss of the power of the /$word when it is used very freuently;. ,hus habituation helps to bring about the
generali&ation or bleaching of semantic content that occurs in grammatici&ation. 1econd$
repeated practices can also change their function$ through the process of eman"ipation, by which the original instrumental function of the practice takes on a symbolic function
inferred from the context in which it occurs. ,hese two processes and other related
processes are crucial to the understanding of how grammatical meaning develops.
6. mancipation and ha!ituation in the creation of grammatical meaning
,he phrase grammatical meaning refers to the type of meaning conveyed by
grammatical morphemes and grammatical constructions. ,his type of meaning is often
contrasted with lexical meaning which is the meaning of nouns$ verbs and ad-ectives.
,he study of grammatici&ation makes it clear that there is no discrete cut+off point between the two types of meaning$ but rather a continuum from one to the other.
5owever$ we can still note the properties of the polar types. /exical meaning is specific
and concrete$ with nouns referring to physical entities and their parts$ and abstract notionsof cultural import. ,he lexical meaning of verbs describes perceived events and relations
among entities$ events that often have concrete physical results. ,he specificity of lexical
meaning is shown by the large number of contrasts that can be made$ i.e. in the number of names for species of trees 2oa!, elm, /ir, pine, willow$ etc.; or the number of designations
for ways to move through space 2wal!, swim, "limb, run, hop, trot, etc.;. ,he more
: Bybee$ >agliuca and >erkins '33' and Bybee$ >erkins and >agliuca '337 demonstrate for a large cross+
linguistic sample that a significant relationship between degree of grammatici&ation in semantic terms and
formal reduction obtains.
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specific the meaning of a lexical item$ the more stable it remains across differing
contexts.
*rammatical meaning$ on the other hand$ is typically abstract$ referring to large$
abstract domains such as time or modality$ or referring to abstract grammatical relations
such as sub-ect of the verb$ or abstract relations among clauses$ such as although. %t isalso highly general$ being applicable to a large number of contexts. (or instance$ every
<nglish sentence has a grammatical designation of tense$ showing that tense is general
enough to apply to any verb in the language. %t is this type of meaning$ so typical ofhuman language$ that is responsible for the great versatility of language$ making it
applicable to any human communicative context. %t is also this type of meaning that is the
most difficult to describe or explain.
Another important difference between lexical and grammatical meaning concerns
the extent to which language users have conscious access to the meaning of units.
1peakers can often report directly and accurately on the meanings of nouns$ verbs and
ad-ectives$ much as they can report pieces of propositional or declarative knowledge2such as !?ashington$ F. 8. is the capital of the U1#;. 5owever$ grammatical meaning is
much less accessible$ and if speakers can report on uses of grammatical constructions$they often seem aware only of the most concrete of these uses. %n this way$ grammatical
knowledge resembles procedural knowledge or skilled ability 2Boyland '33;$ providing
further evidence that grammatical constructions are automated procedures.
,he approach that studies the way grammatical meaning evolves out of lexical
meaning has a great deal to contribute to the general understanding of grammar and its
meaning. 1ome of the mechanisms for semantic change in grammatici&ation have beenidentified and will be discussed briefly here.
.'. <mancipation
<mancipation in ritualistic language is extremely common. >olite expressions of
concern about a persons well+being in mutual greetings$ such as how are you$ reduce tosimple greetings that reuire no substantive response$ such as hi. %n some varieties of
Black <nglish hi is still answered with /ine, reflecting its source in a uestion$ but in most
dialects it is answered with hi. A string of words that originally had literal meaning or
instrumental function$ has lost its instrumental function and become a symbol for thesituation itself due to repetition in a particular contextKin this case the greeting situation.
,he change from a lexical to a grammatical function in grammatici&ation involvesa process that is uite parallel and could also be considered emancipation. As % mentioned
above$ in 1hakespeares <nglish be going to had its literal meaning of movement in space
towards some goal. 5owever$ given an apparent interest by human beings in goals and purposes$ even in 1hakespeares <nglish$ the information value of be going to was less
about movement in space and more about purpose. 8onsider example 2;)
2; 0u!e 1ir Dalentine$ whither away so fast"
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+al. >lease it your grace$ there is a messenger
,hat stays in to bear my letters to my friends$
And % am going to deliver them.
2'@3@$ 1hakespeare$ Two 1entlemen o/ +erona %%%.i.@';
25opper and ,raugott '33:;
Note that even though the Fuke asks about movement 2O?here are you going so fast"O;$
what he really wants to know is Dalentines intention or purpose. Note also that althoughDalentine answers in terms of movement$ he also includes the appropriate information
about his intention.
,he freuent association of be going to with contexts in which the intentions ofthe sub-ect are also being revealed leads to its gradual emancipation from the earlier
meaning of movement in space. ,he new function of expressing a goal or intention also
gradually becomes the main function of the construction.
.0. >ragmatic inference
%n the grammatici&ation literature$ the mechanism of change in this example has
been called pragmatic inference 2,raugott '343$ 5opper and ,raugott '33:;. %t is widely
accepted that an important feature of the communication process is the ability to makeinferences) the speaker must be able to -udge which details the hearer can supply and
formulate his=her utterances accordingly$ and the hearer must fill in details not supplied
by the speaker. ,hus$ the hearer is constantly asking why is s=he asking me or telling me
this" %n the example above$ Dalentine knew that the Fukes uestion was not -ust aboutmovement in space but also about intention and answered appropriately. ?hen the same
pattern of inferences occurs freuently with a particular grammatical construction$ those
inferences can become part of the meaning of the construction. %f be going to isfreuently used to talk about intentions$ it begins to have intention as part of its meaning.
,he literature on grammatici&ation is full of such instances 2,raugott '343$ Bybee et al.
'337;.
,raugott 2'343$ '33@; has identified several important patterns of inferencing that
create semantic change in grammatici&ation and lead to the expression of more abstract
grammatical meaning. 1he argues that more concrete propositional 2lexical; meaning$describing external situations$ such as spatial movement or location$ is regularly inferred
to have meanings that describe internal 2evaluative$ perceptual or cognitive; situations$
such as intention. A second trend which she posits is that both external and internalmeanings can be reinterpreted as having meanings based in the textual situation$ such as
meanings that place the described situation in time before or after the moment of speech$
i.e. tense. A third trend infers the speaker#s sub-ective beliefs or attitudes from the othertwo types of meaning. ,he claim is that the abstract meanings of grammatical
constructions arise from common patterns of inference. ,he types of meanings that arise
in this way suggest that hearers are commonly working to infer as much as possible about
the relations of narrated descriptions to the current speech situation and to the speakers
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sub-ective evaluation of it. ,he content of grammar$ then$ is directly related to$ and arises
from$ the very act of communication. %t is not autonomous from the meanings it conveys
or the purposes it serves.
Note further that common paths of change$ such as those shown in 27; and 2@;$
would not be attested across languages unless users of these languages made very similarinferences under similar conditions. ,hat is$ the repetition across languages of the change
in meaning from !movement towards a goal# to !intention# is evidence that speakers in
different cultures tend to infer intentionsG similarly$ changes from temporal seuence 2as<nglish sin"e, originally meaning !after the time that#; to causation indicate that language
users are prone to infer causation.
.:. *enerali&ation or bleaching as habituation
Another important mechanism of change in grammatici&ation is related to
habituation. ,he earliest discussion of grammaticali&ation recogni&ed that grammatical
morphemes lose components of their original lexical meaning and are much more generaland abstract. (or instance$ will loses the volitional aspect of its meaning and be going to
loses the spatial movement components. ,his process has been called bleaching orgenerali&ation of meaning. ,he latter term is especially appropriate because the loss of
specificities of meaning makes a morpheme applicable in a more general range of
contexts. (or example$ if will does not signal volition$ it can be used with a wider rangeof sub-ects$ including inanimate ob-ects.
6epetition itself diminishes the force of a word$ phrase or construction. <xamples
are legion. Iterate doesnt seem to mean repeat uite strongly enough$ so we tend to addre$& with repetition the strength of that fades and we have to say reiterate again. 2ou guys
generali&es to include females and the word guy now can be used in collouial speech
even for inanimate ob-ects. %n grammatici&ation$ the generali&ation or bleaching of themeaning of a construction is caused by freuency$ but it also contributes to additional
freuency$ since a generali&ed construction can be used in more contexts$ leading to an
almost inexorable movement along a grammatici&ation path.
8onstructions that have been bleached of their more specific lexical meaning are
more likely to pick up inferential meaning from the context$ that is$ grammatical meaning
2Bybee et al. '337;. ,he (rench negative phrase ne ( +- ) pas originally contained both anegative element ne and the noun pas meaning step and was used only with motion
verbs$ with the sense not 2go; a step. Now pas has lost all of its independent meaning in
the construction and has absorbed the negative meaning from the construction. As ne isgradually being deleted$ pas becomes the sole negative marker.
.7. 8ategori&ation
An important feature of generali&ation is the expansion of contexts in which a
construction can occur. (or instance$ the (rench construction ne ( +- ) pas was originally
restricted to use with motion verbs. ,he verb slot in this construction gradually expanded
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to include all verbs. ,he be going to construction in <nglish originally reuired human
sub-ects and active$ agentive verbs$ but now its use has expanded to all types of sub-ects
and verbs.
8onstructions always contain a variable slot 2otherwise we consider them set
phrases;$ and the variable slot is restricted to items of a certain category. ,hese categoriesare usually defined semantically$ with terms such as human$ volitional$ change of state
and so on. 1ome constructions reuire uite specific categories. (or instance$ the
construction typified by the phrase to wend one's way allows a verb of motion$ or a verbconstruable as describing movement or the creation of a path 2 swiggled his way, made
our way, "ut their way;. ,he position after the verb reuires a pronoun that is
coreferential with the sub-ect.
,he various positions in a construction$ then$ reuire categori&ation. ,hese
categories are based on the experience one has with the construction$ -ust as the
categories we create for classifying cultural and natural ob-ects are based on our
experience with the world 26osch '34$ /akoff '34;. /inguistic categories$ both those based on form and those based on meaning$ have a prototype structure. ,hey cannot be
defined adeuately as a series of necessary and sufficient conditions$ but rather must becharacteri&ed in terms of more central and more peripheral members 2see ,aylor$ '334;.
,he possibility of adding new peripheral members to a category allows productivity and
change. New items can be used in a construction if they are perceived as similar in someway to existing members. Accumulated change in membership will lead to change in
what is considered central and what is considered peripheral.
,he productive use of constructions$ or automated subroutines$ is what allowsspeakers to generate new utterances$ as speech consists of these routines concatenated
and embedded in one another. ,hrough practice ones fluency in manipulating and
stringing together constructions increases. /inguistic categori&ation determines theappropriateness of particular combinations of constructions and takes the same form as
categori&ation for non+linguistic percepts. Note that all the component processes that lead
to the development of new grammatical constructions come out of language use incontext and they involve cognitive skills and strategies that are also used in non+linguistic
tasks.
". #he grammaticalization of su!ordinate clauses
?ork on grammaticali&ation has not been restricted to the development of
grammatical morphemes$ but has also involved the larger structures within which thesemorphemes function. %n the late '3E#s *ivon noted that over time loosely -oined
structures or clauses tended to become more tightly fused resulting at times in new
subordinate clauses. An example studied by /ord '3 2see also 5eine et al. '33'$5opper and ,raugott '33:; shows the development of a complementi&er and complement
clauses in some related ?est African languages.
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%n <we$ with the main verb b3 !to say#$ two clauses can be loosely -oined as in
2;)
2; me$b3 me$w $e
%+say %+do+it !% said$ P% did itQ=% said that % did it#
?ith other verbs of saying$ however$ b3 occurs without the pronominal prefix and
functions more like a complementi&er)
24; me$gbl b3 me$w $e
%+say say %+do+it !% said that % did it#
(rom uses such as 24;$ b3 has been extended$ and it can be used as a complementi&er with
many different main verbs$ including verbs of cognition 2ny4 !know#;$ perception 2!p
!see#; and verbs of desire$ as in 23;)
23; me$d5 b3 m4ple awua dewoi%+want say %+1UBJUN8,+buy dress some
!% want to buy some dresses#
Not only has b3 lost its original meaning of !say# and taken on an abstract grammatical
function$ it has also produced a tighter syntactic structure$ as it introduces a subordinateclause.
%n <nglish it is no accident that the complementi&er that has the same phonological form as the demonstrative that $ as textual evidence points to the derivation
of the complementi&er from the demonstrative pronoun. 5opper and ,raugott '33:)'4@+
43 present examples from ld <nglish where the complementi&er that still shows somecharacteristics of being a pronoun and the structures it occurs in are more loosely
connected 2more hypotactic; than today. 8onsider the use in 2'E; where a fronted
demonstrative pronoun corresponds to the complementi&er later in the sentence)
2'E; Tht ge/remede 0iulius hiora "onsul, tht tht angin wearth tidli"e
F<M arranged Fiulius their consul$ 8M> F<M beginning was in+time
thurhtogen.
achieved
,he loose or hypotactic structure of this sentence is reflected in my translation in 2'';.,oday$ a subordinate structure$ such as 2'0;$ would be used.
2''; !,hat$ their consul Fiulius arranged$ that the beginning was on time.#
2'0; !,heir consul Fiulius arranged 2it; that it was started on time.#
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Another type of <nglish complement structure that has developed within the
documented period is the to infinitive. ,he resemblance between the preposition to and
the infinitive marker is again no accident. 5aspelmath '343 demonstrates that it isextremely freuent cross+linguistically for a preposition meaning !to$ towards# to develop
into an infinitive marker. %n ld and Middle <nglish to could be used with an infinitive
2marked with a suffix; to indicate purpose$ and optionally after verbs such as !begin#$!cease# or !teach# but was otherwise not used with verbs 21weet '440;. %n Middle <nglish
to was used in purpose clauses but it had also expanded to clauses with main verbs of
desiring or ordering 2MossH '3@0;. Note that the infinitive suffix 6en still appeared on theverb)
2':; thanne wolde he ma!en hem to dryn!en
!then he wanted to make them drink#
,he use of to before an infinitive continued to expand to a variety of contexts as the
infinitive suffix was lost. ,he result is the loss of much of the prepositional meaning of to
in this context and the development of a new form of the verb for use in a variety ofsubordinate clauses. 21ee 5aspelmath '343 for more details about this development in
*erman and other languages.;
8ertain constructions in <nglish use the infinitive without to$ in particular the
modal auxiliaries 2will, shall, may, "an, would, "ould, etc.;. ,he difference betweenconstructions such as will go without to before the infinitive and want to go with the to
infinitive can be partly explained in terms of the period in which the constructions
developed and began grammaticali&ing. Already in ld <nglish$ the modern modalauxiliaries were used with infinitives$ which at that time were marked with a suffix.
Furing the Middle <nglish period such constructions increased in freuency and became
entrenched. ,he new infinitive marker to was also gradually expanding during the same period$ but because the MFA/ AUR%/%A6S T D<6BC construction was already formed and
entrenched without to$ the new marker has not affected these constructions. %n contrast$
the construction of want T %N(%N%,%D<C developed much later and so uses the infinitivemarker that was current when it developed. ther conservative features of the modal
auxiliary construction are discussed in Bybee 2to appear;.
$. Grammatical change in grammaticalization%
,he recent surge in research on grammaticali&ation has made it clear that the same
set of processes and mechanisms are responsible for all aspects of grammar. Allgrammatical morphemes have developed out of lexical morphemes$ principally nouns
and verbs$ and all grammatical structures have developed out of more loosely organi&ed
constituents. %n this section$ the processes of decategoriali&ation and reduction ofconstituent structure will be illustrated.
4.'. Fecategoriali&ation
Fecategoriali&ation is the term applied to the set of processes by which a noun or
verb loses its morphosyntactic properties in the process of becoming a grammatical
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element 25opper '33';. %n some cases$ the lexical item from which a grammatical
morpheme arose will remain in the language 2 go retains many lexical uses$ despite the
grammaticali&ation of be going to;$ and in other cases$ the lexical item disappears andonly the grammatical element remains 2"an is grammaticali&ed$ and the main verb from
which it developed$ "unnan !to know$# has disappeared;. %n both cases the
grammaticali&ing element ceases to behave like a regular noun or verb.
Derbs lose canonical verbal properties when they become auxiliaries. 8onsider the
auxiliary "an which derives from the ld <nglish main verb "unnan !to know#. %n ld<nglish$ "unnan could be used with a noun phrase ob-ect$ but today "an occurs only with
a verb complement) L I "an that and L I "an her are ungrammatical. ,he <nglish modal
auxiliaries have lost all their inflected or derived forms and are invariable. ,here is no
infinitive 7to "an$ no progressive or gerund form L"anning, and the past form of "an$which is "ould $ is developing non+past uses 2 I "ould do it tomorrow; and will perhaps
lose its function as the past of "an$ -ust as should no longer expresses the past of shall.
,he auxiliaries rarely modify one another. ?hile the use of shall "an was possible in
Middle <nglish$ such constructions have disappeared from Modern <nglish. %n otherwords$ "an has no main verb uses.
An example of a noun which has lost much of its categoriality is the con-uncion while
which was previously a noun meaning a length of time. ,oday it is very limited in its use as a
noun. ?hen it is clause+initial and functioning as a con-unction$ it has no noun properties. ,hus itdoes not take articles nor can it be modified as in 2'7;.
2'7; L% was there the same while you were.
%n other contexts$ its use as a noun is restricted to set phrases such as all the while, a long while.
%t cannot be freely used as a nounG thus 2'@; through 2'; are unacceptable.
2'@; L%ve been there many whiles.
2'; L% waited a boring while.
2'; L,he while was very long.
4.0. /oss of constituent structure
,he elements in constructions that are grammaticali&ing become more tightlyfused together and the internal constituent structure of the construction tends to reduce.
,hus two clauses become one$ two verb phrases become one$ and so on. A few illustrative
examples follow.
5eine et al. '33' report that in ,eso 2a Nilo+1aharan language of western Ienya
and eastern Uganda; the negative construction 2'4; derived from a construction with amain clause and subordinate clause$ as in 2'3;.
2'4; mam petero e$!oto e!i o!
not >eter :1*+want dog
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!>eter does not want a dog#
2'3; e$mam petero e$!tot e!i o!
:1* is not >eter 2who; :1*+want dog
!%t is not >eter who wants a dog#
,he sentence in 2'3; consists of the main verb 6mam which originally meant !not to be#
with >eter as its ob-ect$ and a relative clause modifying >eter. %n the current construction
as in 2'4;$ the verb is grammaticali&ed to a negative particle and negative sentenceconsists of one clause rather than two.
,he <nglish main plus complement clause construction exemplified in 20E; isundergoing grammaticali&ation which results in the loss of the main clause status for the
phrase I thin! 2,hompson and Mulac '33';.
20E; % think that we#re definitely moving towards being more technological.
8ommon uses of I thin! (that) and I guess (that) show that the actual assertion in
utterances like 20E; is contained in the complement clause and the introductory !mainclause# -ust gives an epistemic evaluation of how much confidence the speaker has in the
truth of the assertion. %t is with these two erstwhile main verbs that the omission of that
occurs most freuently$ as in 20';. Also these phrases can be used parenthetically$ inwhich case the former complement clause is the main clause in every respect$ as in 200;.
2<xamples from ,hompson and Mulac '33'.
20'; % think exercise is really beneficial$ to anybody.
200; %t#s -ust your point of view$ you know$ what you like to do in your spare time$ %
think.
,hus a complex clause consisting of a main verb and a complement clause has become a
single main clause modified by an epistemic expression.
%n other cases in which verbs grammaticali&e the result is the reduction of two
verb phrases to one. 8onsider the case of a verb becoming an auxiliary. As illustrated in
20:;$ as the original main verb becomes an auxiliary$ the embedded verb takes on mainverb status. %n any case$ the result is a single D> where formerly there were two.
20:;
1 &' 1
N> D> N> D>
D D> AUR D N>
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>6* D D N>
1ally is going to see Jack 1ally !s gonna see Jack
Another interesting case of the reduction of two D>s to one occurs in languagesthat allow serial verb constructions. ,he following example from Soruba illustrates this
nicely 2*ivon '3@$ 5eine and 6eh '347$ 1tahlke '3E;. %n 207; there are two verbs
which each have direct ob-ects and approximately eual status)
207; mo /i 8d3 g3 igi
% took machete cut tree
,his can either be interpreted as !% took the machete and cut the tree# or$ since /i is
grammaticali&ing as an instrumental preposition$ it is more likely to be intrepreted as !%
cut the tree with the machete.# ,he fact that the serial verb construction has become a
single D> with the grammaticali&ation of /i is underscored by examples such as 20@;)
20@; mo /i g3 igi
% took=with cleverness cut tree
!% cut the tree cleverly#
Almost every case of grammaticali&ation involves such a change in constituent
structure. ?hen viewed in terms of a structural analysis of the successive synchronic
states$ it is tempting to say that a reanalysis has taken place. (or example$ in the twocases -ust examined$ what was a verb is reanaly&ed as an auxiliary in one case and a
preposition in the other. But it is important to note that even these reanalyses take place
gradually$ which means that when grammaticali&ation is occurring$ it may not be possibleto uniuely assign elements to particular grammatical categories or structures. 5eine'33: argues that the reason there is so much controversy surrounding the category of
auxiliary verb$ in that some linguists argue that they are verbs and others argue that they
are a separate category$ is that auxiliaries derive gradually from verbs and have notalways lost all their verbal properties even though they have become grammaticali&ed.
(. )mplications of grammaticalization
Now that the researchers mentioned in this chapter 2and others working on this
topic; have studied the grammaticali&ation process and its outcome from a cross+linguistic perspective as well as in language+specific detail$ we have a much clearer
picture of the nature of grammar. ?e have seen that grammatical constructions arise
through freuent repetition and their meanings change through processes ofgenerali&ation and pragmatic inferencing. *rammatical constructions are automated$
conventionali&ed units$ which % claim$ are also processing units. ,he meanings and
functions of constructions are not fixed and categorical$ but allow variation which leads
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to gradual change over time. An essential factor in the development of grammatical
constructions is language use.
1ince all grammatical categories and constructions are derivable from experience
with language$ there is no reason to suppose that they are innate. %n fact$ the notion of
innate grammatical rules is incompatible with the gradual$ usage+driven nature ofgrammatical change. %nnate rules and categories would be unchangeable over time and
over generations$ or if change occurred$ an abrupt shift from one discrete category to
another would be reuired.7
1trong universals of grammaticali&ation give rise to similarities among languages.
Underlying these universals of change are cognitive and communicative universals. ,he
cognitive processes in grammaticali&ation discussed in this paper are)
2'; the ability to automate neuromotor seuences through repetition
20; the ability to categori&e recurrent linguistic elements
2:; the tendency to infer more than is actually said27; the tendency to habituate to repeated stimuli
ther mechanisms operative in the process of the creation of grammar may be identified
by further research$ perhaps by experimental means$ or by the further examination of
grammatical change in progress.
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(onte) http)==www.unm.edu=W-bybee=8ognitiveX0EprocessesX0EinX0Egrammaticali&ation.doc