2. What is grammaticalization?
In its broadest sense, grammaticalization is ‘the process by which grammar is created or the study
of this process. it is defined as the development from lexical to grammatical forms, and from
grammatical to even more grammatical forms. It is a process of language change by which words
representing objects and actions (i.e. nouns and verbs) become grammatical markers (Affixes,
preposition). It’s a process in which a lexical word or a word cluster loses some or all of its lexical
meaning and starts to fulfil a more grammatical function. Where grammaticalization takes place,
nouns and verbs which carry certain lexical meaning develop over time into grammatical items
such as auxiliaries, case markers, inflections, and Sentence connectives!
3. A well-known example of grammaticalization is that of
the process in which the lexical cluster let us, for
example in "let us eat", is reduced to let's as in "let's
you and me fight". Here, the phrase has lost its lexical
meaning of "allow us" and has become an auxiliary
introducing a suggestion, the pronoun 'us' reduced first
to a suffix and then to an unanalyzed phoneme.
4. Term introduction? What is the purpose
of Grammaticalization?
The term grammaticalization was introduced by French
linguist Antoine Meillet in his 1912 study "L'evolution des
formes grammaticales." According to Meillet, the aim of
studying Grammaticalization is to investigate 'the transition
of autonomous words into the role of grammatical elements’.
5. Types of Grammaticalization:
1. the development of syntax out of discourse including the
fixation of word order
2. the grammaticalization of lexical items into function words
3. clause combining and clause fusion
4. subjectification
6. Some current issues:
1. Insights from Construction Grammar
2. Motivations for the Onset of Grammaticalization
3. Revisiting Analogy and Reanalysis
4. Areal and Contact Studies
7. Grammaticalization as reduction And expansion:
Reduction and expansion in a construction grammar
framework for grammaticalization.
8. Two contrasting approaches have developed over the past thirty years of grammaticalization
research. On one hand, There is a line of research maintaining that grammaticalization is
essentially a process of reduction. In this approach, grammaticalizing expressions are said to
reduce and freeze in form. They become more dependent on, and later even obligatory in
particular syntagmatic contexts. Meaning changes are thought of in terms of semantic bleaching,
i.e. the loss of concrete meaning. On the other hand, there is a tradition of research emphasizing
that grammaticalization involves expansion. In the 1980s, some researchers stressed the
expansive nature of grammaticalization, focusing on the role of pragmatic
enrichment/strengthening and on the emergence of polysemy and multifunctions.