
Building event-based ad hoc properties: On the
... Kratzer (2000) uses the term “resultant state reading” instead of the term “post state reading”, which I will use here. She also has a somewhat narrower understanding of the target state reading in mind, restricting it to only those target states that are reversible (as indicated by the admissibilit ...
... Kratzer (2000) uses the term “resultant state reading” instead of the term “post state reading”, which I will use here. She also has a somewhat narrower understanding of the target state reading in mind, restricting it to only those target states that are reversible (as indicated by the admissibilit ...
Title of paper - Semantics Archive
... Kratzer (2000) uses the term “resultant state reading” instead of the term “post state reading”, which I will use here. She also has a somewhat narrower understanding of the target state reading in mind, restricting it to only those target states that are reversible (as indicated by the admissibilit ...
... Kratzer (2000) uses the term “resultant state reading” instead of the term “post state reading”, which I will use here. She also has a somewhat narrower understanding of the target state reading in mind, restricting it to only those target states that are reversible (as indicated by the admissibilit ...
Origins and development of adjectival passives in Spanish: A corpus
... not SE open the door because well was closed ‘The door does not open because it was well closed.’ (Çid, 12th c.) ...
... not SE open the door because well was closed ‘The door does not open because it was well closed.’ (Çid, 12th c.) ...
HAVE + PERFECT PARTICIPLE
... sufficient detail, and as a consequence two basic questions about the genesis of the have-perfect have not been satisfactorily addressed: (i) how is the early ability of have to predicate possession connected with its later role in the have-perfect?; (ii) what were the syntactic structures and meani ...
... sufficient detail, and as a consequence two basic questions about the genesis of the have-perfect have not been satisfactorily addressed: (i) how is the early ability of have to predicate possession connected with its later role in the have-perfect?; (ii) what were the syntactic structures and meani ...
příčestí přítomné ve funkci premodifikátoru a postmodifikátoru
... The following chapter “Analysis” usually contains three sub-chapters but in this case there are only two sub-chapters. The first sub-chapter includes the methods of research. Usually, in the next chapter there should be the analysis itself. Nevertheless, because of the extensiveness of this analysis ...
... The following chapter “Analysis” usually contains three sub-chapters but in this case there are only two sub-chapters. The first sub-chapter includes the methods of research. Usually, in the next chapter there should be the analysis itself. Nevertheless, because of the extensiveness of this analysis ...
Participles in Time. The Development of the Perfect Tense
... Swedish. The loss of BE is analysed as a change in the properties of the participial stativizer. In Present-Day Swedish, resultant state participles are formed only from verbs with an external argument, but these include also certain verbs with unaccusative behaviour. The perfect tense is argued to ...
... Swedish. The loss of BE is analysed as a change in the properties of the participial stativizer. In Present-Day Swedish, resultant state participles are formed only from verbs with an external argument, but these include also certain verbs with unaccusative behaviour. The perfect tense is argued to ...
Adjectival participles, event kind modification and
... deleted when the participle is adjectivised. She proposes that in the case of eventrelated modification we are dealing with phrasal adjectivisation (following Kratzer 1994), which only allows as its input modifiers that provide information that is characteristic for the result state. However, she do ...
... deleted when the participle is adjectivised. She proposes that in the case of eventrelated modification we are dealing with phrasal adjectivisation (following Kratzer 1994), which only allows as its input modifiers that provide information that is characteristic for the result state. However, she do ...
ON THE SYNTAX OF PARTICIPIAL MODIFIERS*
... 2.2.1. THE PARTICIPIAL (PTCP) NODE. We propose that the N-features of the participle are introduced in the syntax, via embedding of the verbal head under a nominalizing participial node (PTCP). The endowment of the PTCP node with N-features underlies the nominal distribution of participles. The verb ...
... 2.2.1. THE PARTICIPIAL (PTCP) NODE. We propose that the N-features of the participle are introduced in the syntax, via embedding of the verbal head under a nominalizing participial node (PTCP). The endowment of the PTCP node with N-features underlies the nominal distribution of participles. The verb ...
ON THE SYNTAX OF PARTICIPIAL MODIFIERS*
... divided on the basis of their structural complexity into lexical, phrasal, and clausal modifiers. This is a fundamental distinction that should be maintained in the theoretical analysis. Lexical, phrasal and clausal participial modifiers differ from each other in the amount of verbal structure with ...
... divided on the basis of their structural complexity into lexical, phrasal, and clausal modifiers. This is a fundamental distinction that should be maintained in the theoretical analysis. Lexical, phrasal and clausal participial modifiers differ from each other in the amount of verbal structure with ...
Different by-phrases with adjectival and verbal passives
... a syntactic account of adjectival participles similar to McIntyre’s (2013) and Bruening’s (2014) with the kind of semantics that we will assume in this paper (see section 2). In particular, unlike verbal participles, the participles in adjectival passives do not get further embedded under verbal fu ...
... a syntactic account of adjectival participles similar to McIntyre’s (2013) and Bruening’s (2014) with the kind of semantics that we will assume in this paper (see section 2). In particular, unlike verbal participles, the participles in adjectival passives do not get further embedded under verbal fu ...
Martina Mašková - Univerzita Karlova
... phrases can never function as the predicate verb of an independent clause – they can only occur in complex verb phrases and function as various clause elements or as predicates of non- finite clauses. This is the main criterion for distinguishing finite and non- finite verb phrases used by Quirk et ...
... phrases can never function as the predicate verb of an independent clause – they can only occur in complex verb phrases and function as various clause elements or as predicates of non- finite clauses. This is the main criterion for distinguishing finite and non- finite verb phrases used by Quirk et ...
Greek Syntax Search in Accordance
... elements of the search to belong to the same Clause. I. Searching for Subject Accusatives and Infinitives in the Search text Without the syntax, we could have searched for an Accusative and an Infinitive, but that would have returned any Accusative. Most of them would be complements, not subject. By ...
... elements of the search to belong to the same Clause. I. Searching for Subject Accusatives and Infinitives in the Search text Without the syntax, we could have searched for an Accusative and an Infinitive, but that would have returned any Accusative. Most of them would be complements, not subject. By ...
a case of habere + participle in late latin
... of an intransitive verb and a subject of habere unambiguously identical to the agent of the participle, have been identified. There is no variant reading that could cast doubt on these features of habere transgressa. Considering that it is an exceptional example, it is worth examining the factors wh ...
... of an intransitive verb and a subject of habere unambiguously identical to the agent of the participle, have been identified. There is no variant reading that could cast doubt on these features of habere transgressa. Considering that it is an exceptional example, it is worth examining the factors wh ...
Ser & Estar I & II
... The past participle The past participle can be used as an adjective. They usually are preceded by ESTAR, because they describe current ...
... The past participle The past participle can be used as an adjective. They usually are preceded by ESTAR, because they describe current ...
Different by-phrases with adjectival and verbal passives: Evidence
... Alle Briefe wurden mit einem Bleistift geschrieben. all letters became with a pencil written (i) ‘All letters were written with a pencil.’ (possibly more than one pencil) (ii) ‘There was a particular pencil that all letters were written with.’ Die Zeichnung wurde von [einem Kind]i angefertigt. Esi h ...
... Alle Briefe wurden mit einem Bleistift geschrieben. all letters became with a pencil written (i) ‘All letters were written with a pencil.’ (possibly more than one pencil) (ii) ‘There was a particular pencil that all letters were written with.’ Die Zeichnung wurde von [einem Kind]i angefertigt. Esi h ...
(Past) Participle Agreement
... one assumed for the case of preverbal subject–verb agreement in finite clauses. The only difference between the two cases is related to the nature of the past participial morphology which only manifests gender and number features and no person feature. Kayne’s original account, as well as the subse ...
... one assumed for the case of preverbal subject–verb agreement in finite clauses. The only difference between the two cases is related to the nature of the past participial morphology which only manifests gender and number features and no person feature. Kayne’s original account, as well as the subse ...
Page 1 HERMES-IR Hitotsubashi University Repository Page 2 THE
... S 6. Before inquiring into actual instances in OE, we shall compare the expression with that in the main allied languages German and French, so as to clarify the peculiarity of the participle-construction in English. In both German and French we can find the "accusative and infinitive" construction ...
... S 6. Before inquiring into actual instances in OE, we shall compare the expression with that in the main allied languages German and French, so as to clarify the peculiarity of the participle-construction in English. In both German and French we can find the "accusative and infinitive" construction ...
full text
... borrowed from Denison 2000:112) “then we have both feet shod very blamelessly”, or Old High German phîgboum habêta sum giflanzôtan (Tatian 102.2; example borrowed from Heine & Kuteva 2006:156) “he had a fig tree planted”,19 the verb HAVE can also be related to possession, but the (perfect) participl ...
... borrowed from Denison 2000:112) “then we have both feet shod very blamelessly”, or Old High German phîgboum habêta sum giflanzôtan (Tatian 102.2; example borrowed from Heine & Kuteva 2006:156) “he had a fig tree planted”,19 the verb HAVE can also be related to possession, but the (perfect) participl ...
Long Head Movement is Short Head Movement
... itself is probably undesirable. One of the most fundamental properties of movement processes appears to be that they are subject to some sort of relativized minimality requirement (Rizzi 1990, Chomsky 1995). Elements that move in general do not skip elements of the same type. Put differently, if mov ...
... itself is probably undesirable. One of the most fundamental properties of movement processes appears to be that they are subject to some sort of relativized minimality requirement (Rizzi 1990, Chomsky 1995). Elements that move in general do not skip elements of the same type. Put differently, if mov ...
Discrete Skills - Woosterapsi2011
... age, I was nineteen.” You should know that my mother’s expressive command of English belies how much she actually understands. She reads the Forbes report, listens to Wall Street Week, converses daily with her stockbroker, reads Shirley MacLaine’s books with ease—all kinds of things I can’t begin to ...
... age, I was nineteen.” You should know that my mother’s expressive command of English belies how much she actually understands. She reads the Forbes report, listens to Wall Street Week, converses daily with her stockbroker, reads Shirley MacLaine’s books with ease—all kinds of things I can’t begin to ...
(Syntactic) Lexicon and Syntax: Insertion Conditions for Derivational
... English en) is an A (but unlike ing, is never an N). The agreeing adjectival passive en, like the derived adjectival ing, is present in deep structure, while the verbal passive en and the perfective en, like participial ing, are inserted only at s-sttucture. The differences between the passive and t ...
... English en) is an A (but unlike ing, is never an N). The agreeing adjectival passive en, like the derived adjectival ing, is present in deep structure, while the verbal passive en and the perfective en, like participial ing, are inserted only at s-sttucture. The differences between the passive and t ...
Present participles: Categorial classification and derivation Aya
... The study also contributes to the debate over the nature of participles in general, namely whether they should be viewed as a "mixed category", or whether they simply correspond to two homophonous forms of discrete categories – verbs and adjectives. It will be shown that verbal present participles a ...
... The study also contributes to the debate over the nature of participles in general, namely whether they should be viewed as a "mixed category", or whether they simply correspond to two homophonous forms of discrete categories – verbs and adjectives. It will be shown that verbal present participles a ...
1 Present participles
... The study also contributes to the debate over the nature of participles in general, namely whether they should be viewed as a "mixed category", or whether they simply correspond to two homophonous forms of discrete categories – verbs and adjectives. It will be shown that verbal present participles a ...
... The study also contributes to the debate over the nature of participles in general, namely whether they should be viewed as a "mixed category", or whether they simply correspond to two homophonous forms of discrete categories – verbs and adjectives. It will be shown that verbal present participles a ...
Sentence variety exercise 4
... 2. Write a sentence that contains a restrictive present participial phrase that should not be set off with commas. 3. Use the word “dancing” in a sentence, and write a non-restrictive participial phrase. 4. Change the word “fight” into a present participle, add other words to make it a participial p ...
... 2. Write a sentence that contains a restrictive present participial phrase that should not be set off with commas. 3. Use the word “dancing” in a sentence, and write a non-restrictive participial phrase. 4. Change the word “fight” into a present participle, add other words to make it a participial p ...
`Genitive Absolute` in New Testament/Hellenistic Greek
... Hellenistic Greek.25 Instead of having one main verb with other actions around it all subordinated in participles, the tendency was to start giving each action its own independent clause, more like what is usually done today in English. An initial stage in this process could be to distance certain a ...
... Hellenistic Greek.25 Instead of having one main verb with other actions around it all subordinated in participles, the tendency was to start giving each action its own independent clause, more like what is usually done today in English. An initial stage in this process could be to distance certain a ...