Contents
1.Introduction: New Perspectives on Non-Canonical English Syntax
2.Talking about (Non-)Canonicity: A Study of Linguistic Terminology
Part I:Non-Canonical Syntax in Historical Varieties of English
3.Introduction: Trying to Hit a Moving Target: (Non-)Canonical Word Order in the History of English
4.Full-Verb Inversion in the History of English: Continuation or Emergence of a Non-Canonical Word Order?
5.There’s thieves in the house: Existential there-Constructions in Late Modern English
6.’Tis goodly language this, what would it mean? Demonstrative ProTags in the History of English
Part II:Non-Canonical Syntax in Register-Based Varieties of English
7.Introduction: Different Ways of Saying Different Things: Non-Canonical Syntax in Registers of English
8.The President wide awake at 3:14 AM tweeting about CNN: Informational Non-Canonical Reduced Structures in TV News Broadcasts
9.What was it about it that you loved? Clefts in Evaluative Language
10.Cognitive Complexity and Non-Canonicity: Zooming in on Particle Placement
Part III:Non-Canonical Syntax in Non-Native Varieties of English
11.Introduction: Multicultural Communicative Situations: Non-Canonical Syntax in Non-Native Englishes
12.Non-Canonical Syntax in South Asian Varieties of English: A Corpus-Based Study on the Introductory-it Pattern
13.Adverbial Fronting Phenomena in German Learner Language: A Corpus-Based Study
14.Non-Canonical Syntax in English as a Lingua Franca: Minus-Plurals between Language Contact and Emergent Grammar
15.Synopsis: Concepts, Approaches, and Methods in Non-Canonical Syntax