The English Perfect: Tense-choice and Pragmatic InferencesNorth-Holland Publishing Company : sole distributors for the U.S.A. and Canada, Elsevier North-Holland, 1978 - Language Arts & Disciplines - 279 pages |
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Page 52
... iterative " ( class ( e ) for future reference ) . Jespersen ( 1931 : 70 ) considers a number of examples in which " the perfect often seems to imply repetition " ' but makes no special category for them . Many of these contain an ...
... iterative " ( class ( e ) for future reference ) . Jespersen ( 1931 : 70 ) considers a number of examples in which " the perfect often seems to imply repetition " ' but makes no special category for them . Many of these contain an ...
Page 53
... iterative force to the example . VoilĂ the iterative perfect ! Another scholar who was struck by the frequent iterativity of the perfect was Zandvoort ( 1932 ) . He accepted the resulta- tive and the continuous types , but felt there ...
... iterative force to the example . VoilĂ the iterative perfect ! Another scholar who was struck by the frequent iterativity of the perfect was Zandvoort ( 1932 ) . He accepted the resulta- tive and the continuous types , but felt there ...
Page 54
... iterative by nature -- at least wherever it was not continuous or resultative . But then he came upon a poem of Matthew Arnold's containing the line And once , in winter .. have not pass'd thee on the wooden bridge ? which follows ...
... iterative by nature -- at least wherever it was not continuous or resultative . But then he came upon a poem of Matthew Arnold's containing the line And once , in winter .. have not pass'd thee on the wooden bridge ? which follows ...
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Common terms and phrases
actually adverbs Aktionsart Allen ambiguity analysis anteriority appears argued argument aspect aspectual atelic auxiliary Bauer chapter clause co-occurrence consider context contrast CR theory current relevance definite Defromont deixis discussed distinction Diver earlier EB theory Einstein embedded past English perfect equivalent examples existential experiential expressions fact fect function future gone grammar Huddleston ibid ID theory identified imperfective indefinite indicate inferences interpretation iterative Jespersen John language later lexical linguistic markedness McCawley McCawley's meaning Middle English morpheme normally noun phrases opposition participle particular past event past perfect past tense perfect tense perfective aspect period periphrastic possible Poutsma pragmatic predicates present perfect present tense preterit and perfect preterit/perfect problem reading recently reference point Reichenbach relation relationship seems semantic sense sentence simple simultaneous speaker speaking specific stative structure syntactic telic temporal tense forms types underlying unmarked usage verb forms verb phrase Visser XN theory yesterday Zandvoort