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Subject:
From:
"Kathleen M. Ward" <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Assembly for the Teaching of English Grammar <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 4 Jun 2009 14:55:24 -0700
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I am not sure about this, but in the original example might be just an  
example of a free (or clause modifying) relative clause, with a  
resumptive pronoun ("this," which would be referring to the whole "We  
may have to postpone some promises."

English doesn't "have" resumptive pronouns, in the formal grammar, but  
you'd be surprised how often they turn up in speech.

> "We may have
> to postpone some promises, which we're going to get through this."
On Jun 4, 2009, at 7:23 AM, Bruce Despain wrote:

> Herb,
>
> My impression is that the construction you are looking at is the  
> result of certain elisions that the interpreter may have difficulty  
> restoring.  This is not to say that the construction is not  
> reanalyzed as a co-ordination, just that perhaps it was not  
> originally intended to be.  Consider the possibility that the  
> original was meant as "We may have to postpone some promises, which  
> (if we do) we're going to get through this."
> Perhaps your other example has elisions of the definite reference:  
> "We were going to go on a picnic (last) Saturday, (on) which  
> (Saturday) it rained."  I was reminded when seeing these sentences  
> of the surprisingly common omission of elements of an adverb clause  
> contained within a restrictive adjective clause: "She sent a letter  
> which unless we get back, must ruin them both." - (Jespersen. A  
> Modern English Grammar on Historical Principles, Vol. IV. 1931. P.  
> 202)  The complete omission of the adverbial element, tempting when  
> it is so close to its antecedent, runs the risk of losing the  
> connection of the adjective clause to that antecedent: and behold, a  
> new interpretation and a correspondingly new syntactic analysis --  
> grammaticalization in action.
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Assembly for the Teaching of English Grammar [mailto:[log in to unmask] 
> ] On Behalf Of STAHLKE, HERBERT F
> Sent: Wednesday, June 03, 2009 10:46 PM
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: which we're going to get through this
>
> I posted the following on the American Dialect Society List ADS-L,  
> and I'm cross-posting to ATEG in hopes that some of you may have run  
> into this curious construction and may be able to shed some light on  
> it.
>
> There are a couple of TV ads on currently featuring a working-class
> guy telling his family, in one, and his son in the other, that he may
> get laid off.  In the family ad he saiys something like "We may have
> to postpone some promises, which we're going to get through this."
> Those are not the exact words, but the use of "which" is as he uses it
> in the ad.  I suspect the usage may be employed by the writers as a
> marker of class, and I've heard it before in sentences like "We were
> going to go on a picnic Saturday, which it rained."  I don't remember
> hearing it used much by college educated speakers.  The social
> contexts have been working class.
>
> Wh-indefinite pronouns or question words started to show up as
> relative pronouns in the 10th c. under the influence of Latin, but
> with the demise of English as a written standard after the Norman
> Conquest, the shift disappeared until English once again became a more
> widely used written language in the late 13th c.  The wh-relatives
> came into literate, educated English between about 1300 and 1600, with
> a few changes in usage after that.  The King James Version (1611)
> translates the first phrase of the Lord's Prayer as "Our father which
> art in heaven," but since about the 18th c. "which" has not been used
> to refer to humans.
>
> The usage of wh-relatives does seem to be related to level of
> education, and I wonder if the use of "which" as a sort of
> coordinating conjunction, as above, might be a hypercorrection.
> Speakers who don't have the professional class rules governing "which"
> know that some people use "which" in ways in which they themselves
> don't.  The "which" plus coordinate clause construction arises as an
> unsuccessful attempt to emulate those rules.  Treating these sentences
> in this way is a WAG.  I've searched the ADS-L archives for postings
> dealing with "which," and I found the usual "that" vs. "which"
> discussions, quite a few of them in fact, but none dealing with the
> coordinating usage.  Does anyone know of scholarship that deals with
> this construction?
>
> Herb
>
>
> Herbert F. W. Stahlke, Ph.D.
> Emeritus Professor of English
> Ball State University
> Muncie, IN  47306
> [log in to unmask]
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