Historical Code-mixing and Hybrid Place-names in England
Abstract
The purpose of the dissertation is to present a corpus-based analysis of hybrid place-names
occurring in England within the framework of historical sociolinguistics and historical codeswitching.
The various types of place-name formations found in England will be presented
and it will be argued that certain formations can be construed as instances of historical codemixing
and that the sociolinguistic and stratal relationship of languages involved in the
creation of hybrid place-names is the main determinant of the outcome of toponymic
influence. The nature of the creation of toponyms will also be surveyed, and it will be argued
that they are in fact darkened compounds whose semantic content is the main determiner of
the changes that will affect them.