@incollection{Kopf2018, author = {Kristin Kopf}, title = {From genitive suffix to linking element. A corpus study on the genesis and productivity of a new compounding pattern in (Early) New High German}, series = {Germanic genetives}, editor = {Tanja Ackermann and Horst J. Simon and Christian Zimmer}, publisher = {Benjamins}, address = {Amsterdam [u.a.]}, isbn = {978-90-272-0023-5}, doi = {10.1075/slcs.193.05kop}, url = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:bsz:mh39-78970}, pages = {91 -- 114}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Present-day German uses two formally different patterns of compounding in N+N compounds. The first combines bare stems (e.g. Tisch+decke ‘tablecloth’) while the second contains an intervening linking element (LE) as in Geburt-s-ort ‘birth-LE-place’. The linked compounding type developed in Early New High German (1350–1650) from phrasal constructions by reanalyzing genitive attributes as first constituents of compounds. The present paper uses corpus data to explore three key stages in this development: In the initial stage, it shows how prenominal non-specific genitive constructions lent themselves to reanalysis due to their functional overlap and formal similarity. Additionally, compounds seem to have replaced not only prenominal genitives, but also structurally different postnominal genitives. In the second stage, the new compounding pattern increases in productivity between 1500 and 1710, especially compared to the older pattern without linking elements. The last stage pertains to changes in spelling practice. It shows that linked compounds were written separately in the beginning. Their gradual graphematic integration into directly connected words was reversed by a century of hyphenation (1650–1750). This is strikingly different from present-day spelling practice and shows that the linked pattern was still perceived as marked.}, language = {en} }