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Dative for Accusative Case Interchange in Epistolary Formulas in Greek Papyrus Letters
Authors:Joanne Vera Stolk  Delphine Nachtergaele
Affiliation:1. Department of Philosophy, Classics, History of Arts and Ideas, University of Oslo, Norway;2. Department of Ancient Greek Linguistics, Ghent University, Belgium
Abstract:Greek papyrus letters preserve not only instances of the replacement of the dative case; they also show the use of the dative instead of the accusative case as direct object and disjoint infinitival subject. This interchange is mostly found in epistolary phrases, namely the salutation formula (?σπ?ζομα? σε) and the initial (ε?χομα? σε ?για?νειν) and final (?ρρ?σθα? σε ε?χομαι) health wishes. The phonetic similarity of the pronouns might have created the circumstances for case confusion. Contamination of the constructions reflects the difficulties of the scribes to construct conservative epistolary phrases and, thereby, diachronic phraseological variation might reflect language change. In salutation formulas, the use of a dative Addressee could be explained by analogical overextension from the category of communication verbs taking a dative complement. The decline of the accusative and infinitive construction might be one of the reasons why the accusative disjoint infinitival subject is replaced by the dative case in health wishes.
Keywords:Greek papyrology  Greek linguistics  epistolary formulas  case interchange  language change  private letters
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