Non-finite complementation : a usage-based study of infinitive and -ing clauses in English

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

Non-finite complementation : a usage-based study of infinitive and -ing clauses in English

Thomas Egan

(Language and computers : studies in practical linguistics, no. 65)

Rodopi, 2008

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Note

"A completely rewritten version of a dissertation presented to the University of Oslo in 2002"-- Pref.

Bibliography: p. [311]-317

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book presents a comprehensive guide to the way speakers of British English use infinitive and -ing clauses as verbal complements. It contains details of the non-finite complementation patterns of over 300 matrix verbs, with a particular emphasis on verbs that occur with more than one type of non-finite complement. Drawing upon data from the British National Corpus, the author shows that some of the views which are to be found in the existing literature on these sorts of clauses are in conflict with the evidence of actual usage. He also shows that there is actually much more regularity in this area than has often been taken to be the case. Moreover, this regularity is shown to be motivated by cognitive-functional factors. An appendix contains details of the relative frequency of all of the constructions dealt with in the study, together with an example of each of them. The book is of interest to language teachers as well as linguists, both theoretical and applied.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements Preface I: The purpose and scope of the study II: Classification of the constructions III: Earlier Studies IV: Complement Types and Complementisers V: Constructions in contrast: Same-time constructions VI: Constructions in contrast: Forward-looking constructions VII: Constructions in contrast: Backward-looking constructions VIII: Summary and Conclusions References Appendices Index

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