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The most stable it's ever been: the preterit/present perfect alternation in spoken Ontario English

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 November 2022

KARLIEN FRANCO
Affiliation:
Faculty of Arts KU Leuven & FWO Vlaanderen Blijde Inkomststraat 21 box 33083000 Leuven Belgium karlien.franco@kuleuven.be
SALI A. TAGLIAMONTE
Affiliation:
Faculty of Arts and Science, Department of Linguistics University of Toronto Sidney Smith Hall Room 4075 100 St George Street, Toronto ON, M5S 3G3 Canada sali.tagliamonte@utoronto.ca
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Abstract

English tense/aspect-marking is an area where variation abounds and where many theories have been formulated. Diachronic studies of the preterit/present perfect alternation indicate that the present perfect (e.g. I have eaten already) has been losing ground to the preterit (e.g. I ate already) (e.g. Elsness 1997, but see Hundt & Smith 2009, Werner 2014). However, few studies have examined this alternation in vernacular speech. This article fills this lacuna by analyzing spoken data from Ontario, Canada, from an apparent-time perspective. Using a large archive of multiple communities and people of different generations, we focus on linguistic contexts known to be variable, viz. with adverbs of indefinite time. Results indicate that, in contrast with previous studies, the alternation is mostly stable. We find evidence of change only with the adverb ever. Where there is evidence of change, this change is different from the predictions in the literature, with the preterit increasing in frequency. We suggest that a minor constructionalization process operates in tandem with ongoing specialization of the preterit/present perfect contrast. Taken together, these results provide another example of the importance of including speech in research on language variation and change and of the unique contribution certain constructions make to more general systems of grammar.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors, 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Figure 1. Werner's (2013: 211) hierarchy of decreasing perfect-friendliness across twelve varieties of the ICE corpora

Figure 1

Table 1. Sample characteristics by broad social factors

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Figure 2. Distribution of year of birth in the dataset

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Table 2. Counts and frequency of preterits and present perfects per adverb

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Table 3. Polarity contexts in the dataset (all examples recorded in Toronto)

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Table 4. Frequency of polarity contexts per adverb

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Table 5. Preterit and present perfect per sentence type for since and recently

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Table 6. Overview of grammatical person (examples from Toronto unless otherwise specified)

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Figure 3. Percentage of present perfects (y-axis) per grammatical person (x-axis). The white text in each bar shows the number of tokens per category.

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Figure 4. Present perfect (percentage) with respect to object type

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Table 7. Output of the mixed-effects logistic regression model

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Figure 5. Predicted proportion of preterit by year of birth (centred) and adverb. The error bars show the standard errors.

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Figure 6. Frequency of the polarity contexts with ever per individuals’ decade of birth

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Figure 7. Proportion of present perfect per polarity context of ever by individuals’ decade of birth