[log in to unmask]">The summary of this article suggests you might get your answer here, although I haven't had time to read it myself:
Ineke Sluiter, "Seven Grammarians on the 'ablativus absolutus'"
in _Historiographia Linguistica_ 27:2/3. 2000. (pp. 379–414)
Summary
In this article, the history of the so-called ablative absolute as a descriptive category is traced from the 3rd to the 20th century. Texts by Sacerdos, Diomedes, Priscian, Alberic of Montecassino, Kühner & Stegmann and Harm Pinkster illustrate how the ablative absolute is recognized long before it get its name, and how its role in grammatical description is invented, changes, and disappears again in accordance with the grammatical systems adopted by the respective grammarians. The ablative absolute starts as a kind of appendix to the doctrine of the parts of speech, is moved from the description of the noun to that of the participle, and eventually just fades away as a descriptive label in its own right in the context of Functional Grammar. Its history cannot, of course, prove that the ‘God’s Truth’ metaphysics of grammar is wrong, but it certainly looks like a series of manifestations of grammatical ‘Hocus Pocus’.
Karl Hagen
Department of English
Mount St. Mary's College
Spruiell, William C wrote:
Nineteenth-century grammars typically classified nouns as being
"subjective" "objective, or "possessive"; the noun at the beginning of
an average absolute phrase isn't either of these, so it got its own
label (typically, nominals that function primarily adverbially, like
"yesterday," would be considered adverbs in these grammars, so they
weren't the same kind of problem for the authors). Harvey 1869.74-5,
for example, lists "nominative, objective, possessive, and absolute" as
the English noun cases. He used the same trick, however, to deal with
"vocatives" in initial position. His example is, "Your *fathers*, where
are they?"
Now, the practice may well have been borrowed from Latin, but I'd also
want to check to see if the *modern* term for the Latin construction
wasn't based on the same kind of logic. Did Priscian refer to those
constructions as ablative absolutes (or rather, the Latin equivalent),
or did the *label* "ablative absolute" develop in English grammars of
Latin?
Bill Spruiell
Dept. of English
Central Michigan University
-----Original Message---
From: Assembly for the Teaching of English Grammar
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Jane Saral
Sent: Wednesday, March 16, 2005 4:00 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: absolute phrases?
My understanding is that the name comes from the Latin ablative
absolute, which consists of a noun and an adjectival form.
Jane Saral
The Westminster Schools
Atlanta, GA
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