How Germanic languages shaped the future: a clear, evidence‑based look at how early forms express what’s to come.
This study traces the evolution of the present tense, sollen, wollen, and werden as future helpers across Bavarian, Alemannic, Middle German, and other dialects.
Readers will see how medieval texts and sermons reveal different patterns for expressing futurity. The work connects linguistic forms to their historical use, showing how and why certain constructions rose or fell in popularity over time. It offers a concise synthesis of both data and interpretation, without assuming prior specialist knowledge.
- How present tense, sollen + inf, wollen + inf, and werden + inf function as future markers across dialects
- Patterns by person and text type, from sermons to epic poems
- Historical explanations for the emergence of certain periphrases
- Connections between medieval usage and later Germanic language change
Ideal for readers of historical linguistics, Germanic philology, and language history seeking a grounded, accessible overview.