ETYMOLOGY AND GRAMMATICAL DISCOURSE AMSTERDAM STUDIES IN THE THEORY AND HISTORY OF LINGUISTIC SCIENCE General Editor E. F. KONRAD KOERNER (University of Ottawa) Series III - STUDIES IN THE HISTORY OF THE LANGUAGE SCIENCES Advisory Editorial Board Ranko Bugarski (Belgrade); Jean-Claude Chevalier (Paris) H.H. Christmann (Tübingen); Boyd H. Davis (Charlotte, N.C.) Rudolf Engler (Bern); Hans-Josef Niederehe (Trier) R.H. Robins (London); Rosane Rocher (Philadelphia) Vivian Salmon (Oxford); Aldo Scaglione (New York) Volume 44 Mark Amsler Etymology and Grammatical Discourse in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages ETYMOLOGY AND GRAMMATICAL DISCOURSE IN LATE ANTIQUITY AND THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES MARK AMSLER University of Delaware JOHN BENJAMINS PUBLISHING COMPANY AMSTERDAM/PHILADELPHIA 1989 TM The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American 8 National Standard for Information Sciences — Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48–1984. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Etymology and grammatical discourse in late antiquity and the early Middle Ages / Mark Amsler. p. cm. -- (Amsterdam studies in the theory and history of linguistic science. Series III, Studies in the history of the language sciences, ISSN 0304-0720; v. 44) Includes index. Bibliography: p. 1. Classical languages --Etymology. 2. Classical languages --Grammar. 3. Classical philology --History --To 1500. 4. Linguistics --History --To 1500. PA191 .A47 1989 480/.09/02--19 88007616 ISBN 978 90 272 4527 4 (hB; alk. paper) © 1989 – John Benjamins B.V. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, by print, photoprint, microfilm, or any other means, without written permission from the publisher. John Benjamins Publishing Company • P.O. Box 36224 • 1020 me Amsterdam • The Netherlands John Benjamins North America • P.O. Box 27519 • Philadelphia, PA 19118-0519 • USA For Ben Amsler and Florence Small Amsler Table of Contents Acknowledgments ix Abbreviations xi Prelude 1 1. Etymology and Discourse in Late Antiquity 15 1.1 Etymological Strategies of Intervention 19 1.2 Varro's Etymological Model 24 1.3 The Critique of 'Etymologia' from Plato to Augustine 31 2. Technical and Exegetical Grammar Before Isidore 57 2.1 Etymology and Technical Grammar from Donatus to Priscian 59 2.2 Sacred Onomastics and Christian Grammar 82 2.3 Augustine, Jerome, and Glossography 100 2.4 Grammatical Criticism: the Aeneid and the Bible 118 3. Isidore of Seville and the Etymological Encyclopedia 133 3.1 Definitions and Concepts of 'Etymologia' 136 3.2 The Grammatical Model 147 3.3 Origines verborum 158 3.4 Origines rerum 165 4. The Text of Early Medieval Grammar 173 4.1 Vocation and Grammar 177 4.2 An Interlude of Virgilius Maro Grammaticus 197 4.3 Technical Grammar, Encyclopedias, and Dialectic 207 Postlude 251 References 255 Index 277 Acknowledgments There are people who make writing a book take longer than one thinks it should and those who help get a book written faster than one fears it will take. Bill Frawley, Daniel Callahan, Phil Goldstein, Jim Dean, Bruce Fin- nie, Leo Lemay, students in the History of Linguistics graduate seminar, Konrad Koerner, Jan Ziolkowski, and the anonymous reader for the series in which this volume is appearing as its Vol. 44 are responsible for making me see there was more to say when I thought I had said enough. In particu lar, the anonymous reader provided me with the sort of detailed review and critique a writer dreams about and fears. Thanks to that person's scrupul ous review, the details, citations, and quotations in this book are more accurate than I alone could make them. Professors Alan Brown, Walter Scheps, and Christian Zacher read a much earlier draft of what are now Chapters Two and Three and allowed me to bite off more than I could chew. Errors and omissions are my own problems. The diligent staff of the University of Delaware's Morris Library Inter- library Loan Office (especially Nancy Froysland-Hoerl) made my work easier and the library holdings substantially larger. Professors Bernhard Bischoff, Bengt Löfstedt, Louis Holtz, and Martin Irvine provided me with important materials at the eleventh hour. Erin Mackie and Brad Howard did yeoman's and woman's service checking references and quotations. Deborah Lyall and Suzanne Potts processed the words of several drafts. The University of Delaware General Research Fund twice provided me with leave time to read and write. The School of Criticism and Theory gave me a fellowship during which time I read and argued about critical dis course, semiotics, and the historiography of language study in a wonderful intellectual pressure cooker. I thank those who have heard me out regarding the history of linguis tics, especially the participants in: the International Conference on Medieval Grammar (Davis, Calif., 1976), the Colloquium on Classical and X ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Medieval Semiotics (Toronto, 1982), the Lilly-Pennsylvania Medieval Studies Colloquium (Philadelphia, 1982), and the Fourth International Conference on the History of the Language Sciences (Trier, W. Germany, 1987). Part of Chapter One first appeared in Recherche SémiotiquelSemio- tic Inquiry and is reprinted here by permission. Finally, Ann Amsler, present at the beginning, the ending, and the middling, thank you. Newark, Delaware Mark Amsler December 1987
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