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The grammar of the english verb phrase part 119 pdf

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For example, in Meg had seen Jill, the situationtime of had seen is ‘temporally bound by’ or ‘temporally subordinated to’ an orientation time which is not explicitly referred to but form

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within a temporal domain For example, in Meg had seen Jill, the situation

time of had seen is ‘(temporally) bound by’ (or ‘temporally subordinated to’)

an orientation time which is not explicitly referred to but forms part of a past

temporal domain Strictly speaking, it is only situation times that can be bound,

but by extension we can also apply the label to the situation itself In this way

we can say that in Sue knew that Meg had seen Jill the situation of knowing

is the ‘binding situation’, while the situation of Meg seeing Jill is the ‘bound

sit-uation’

Temporal clause: see time clause.

Temporal domain: set of orientation times which are temporally related to each

other by means of tenses At least one of these orientation times is a situation

time (since any tense form locates an actualization of a situation in time) A

domain is normally established by an absolute tense form and expanded by

one or more relative tense forms The latter establish temporal subdomains

Thus, inJohn said he had prayed, the absolute past tense form said establishes

a past domain andhad prayed creates a subdomain within that domain.

Temporal focus: the phenomenon that the speaker’s tense choice is determined

by his wish to focus on the time of actualization of a situation or on a

particu-lar nonpresent portion of the time of a full situation which also includes t0

The former possibility is illustrated by the difference between He must have

been the culprit (⫽ present conclusion about an anterior situation) and He had

to be the culprit (⫽ past conclusion about a situation which was then

actualiz-ing) The latter possibility is exemplified by [I spoke to the foreigner in French

because] he didn’t understand English (The foreigner presumably still does not

understand English at the temporal zero-point, so the speaker could have used

doesn’t understand Using the past tense, however, he focuses on the time when

he spoke to the foreigner rather than on the present.)

Temporal subdomain: temporal domain inside another temporal domain.

Whenever a situation time is incorporated into an already existing temporal

domain, it creates a subdomain This newly introduced situation time

automat-ically functions as the central orientation time of the subdomain in question

For example, in John said that he had warned the others that he felt sick, the

tense formsaid establishes a past domain, and had warned establishes a

subdo-main within it.Felt [sick] expresses a T-relation (viz simultaneity) in the

subdo-main established by had warned and in doing so creates another subdomain,

which is not further expanded

Temporal subordination: the use of a relative tense See temporal binding.

Temporal W-interpretation: interpretation of temporal relations as they exist

in the actual world (or any other possible world referred to) regardless of

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whether they are expressed by tense forms or not For example, inWhen they had first seen it, the house had made an overwhelming impression on them,

the (actualizations of the) two situations are interpreted as W-simultaneous with each other, but neither of the past perfect tense forms expresses T-simulta-neity

Temporal zero-point (or zero-time or t 0): the time which is the ultimate ‘origin’

of all the temporal relations expressed by the temporal structure of a tense,

i e the only time in a tense structure that is not itself represented as dependent

on another (more basic) time It is the only time that is given (‘assumed known’) whenever a sentence is uttered In English, the temporal zero-point is nearly always the encoding time, i e the time of uttering or writing the mes-sage Occasionally, the zero-point is the decoding time, i e the time when the addressee is expected to hear or read the message, as is the case when a note stuck to someone’s door readsI am in room 21 (As always, the present tense

locates the situation time at t0, but t0is the time of reading the message rather than the time of writing it.)

Temporally bound (or temporally subordinated): said of a situation time that

is related by a tense form to an orientation time functioning as central orienta-tion time of a temporal domain – see temporal binding

Temporally subordinated: see temporally bound.

Temporary habit: habit that is represented as being restricted in time If the

verb is dynamic, a temporary habit is expressed by the use of the progressive form For example:She’s (currently) working 60 hours a week.

Tense: (a) the phenomenon that a language has a special system of verb forms

to locate (the actualizations of) situations in time; (b) the correlation of a particular grammatical form with a particular tense meaning (e g the ‘past tense’) In more detail: tense is a linguistic concept (as opposed to time) denot-ing the form taken by the verb to locate (the actualization of) the situation referred to in time, i e to express the temporal relation between the time of the situation in question and an orientation time which may be either the temporal zero-point or another orientation time that is temporally related (di-rectly or indi(di-rectly) to the temporal zero-point English has several tenses, such

as the present tense, the past tense, etc., to which correspond different verb forms, which are called the tense forms of the verb

Tense auxiliary: cover term for the perfect tense auxiliaryhave and the future

tense auxiliarywill (or shall).

Tense form: a concrete verb form expressing a particular tense, in other words,

a particular form taken by the verb to express a particular temporal meaning

A tense form can be a simple verb form (e g ‘verb stem ⫹ past tense

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mor-pheme’) or a complex one (e g ‘[verb stem of future tense auxiliary ⫹ past

tense morpheme]⫹ perfect infinitive’, i e the conditional perfect tense form)

That is, it may either consist of one constituent (the main verb) only or be a

phrase involving one or more auxiliaries next to the main verb

Tensed clause: clause involving a tensed verb form, i e finite clause.

Tensed proposition: see proposition.

Tensed verb form: see tense form.

Tenseless (or nontensed or untensed) verb form: verb form which is not marked

for tense, i e which does not encode information about how a situation time

is related (directly or indirectly) to the temporal zero-point Nonfinite verb

forms and subjunctive verb forms are tenseless in this sense

Tense relation (or T-relation): temporal relation expressed by a tense form For

example, the future perfect, which is an absolute-relative tense, expresses two

T-relations: ‘The time of the situation is anterior to an implicit time of

orienta-tion’ and ‘the implicit time of orientation is posterior to the temporal

zero-point’ (e g He will have left).

Tense structure: particular temporal meaning expressed by a tense This is the

temporal structure (minimally involving a situation time, an orientation time

and a temporal relation between them) which represents a specific way of

locating the actualization of a situation in time For example, the tense

struc-ture of the fustruc-ture tense consists of the temporal relation ‘The situation time is

T-posterior to the temporal zero-point’

Tentative world: (a) possible world which is nonfactual and which is assumed

by the speaker to be unlikely ever to become the actual world (e g the

hypo-thetical future world inYou would be punished if you did that); (b) Nonfactual

world which is represented as tentative for reasons of tact, politeness, etc (e g

Would you please help me?).

Terminative aspect: see egressive aspect.

Time: extralinguistic category (as opposed to tense), relating to our experience

of the way that (the actualizations of) different situations are arranged with

respect to one another along a nonspatial continuum (⫽ the time line), from

the past through the present to the future

Time adverbial (or temporal adverbial): cover term for three kinds of

adverbi-als giving temporal information: time-specifying adverbiadverbi-als (e g.at six o’clock),

pure duration adverbials (e g.for two hours) and bifunctional adverbials

(spec-ifying both time and duration, e g.from six to eight).

Time clause: subclause indicating time The unmarked interpretation is that of

‘adverbial time clause’, i e subclause specifying an Adv-time In He left when

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I left, the when-clause specifies an Adv-time which contains (in terms of

coinci-dence) the situation time of the head clause There are various other types of time clauses, e g relative clauses depending on an antecedent referring to time (e g [I’ll always remember the day] when she died), time clauses with a

nomi-nal function (e g [I don’t know] when he did it), narrative time clauses (e g.

[We were having tea] when suddenly the window burst), etc.

Time line: the conceptualization of the way time ‘flows’ by users of English.

The time line is conceptualized as consisting of two different time-spheres, viz the past time-sphere and the present time-sphere, between which there is felt

to be a break

Time of orientation: see orientation time.

Time of the full situation: time which is taken up by the full situation and

which may be longer than the time of the predicated situation (⫽ the situation time) if the (actualization of the) situation is homogeneous (⫽ nonbounded) For example, inTwo minutes ago John was in the library, the situation time is

that portion of the full situation (of John being in the library) that coincides with the Adv-time specified bytwo minutes ago The time of the full situation

may be much longer and may include the temporal zero-point

Time of the predicated situation: time taken up by the predicated situation.

Synonym of situation time

Time of the situation: see situation time.

Time-specifying adverbial: temporal adverbial like at 5 p.m., yesterday, etc.

whose function is to locate a situation time or other orientation time in time

by indicating a specific Adv-time (‘adverbially indicated time’) This Adv-time

‘contains’ the orientation time in question in terms of inclusion or coincidence

Time-sphere: one of the two main divisions of time reflected in English tense

morphology, namely ‘past’ and ‘nonpast’ Hence, we speak of the past time-sphere and the present time-time-sphere (or nonpast time time-sphere) In more detail: the use of a tense form in English implies that the speaker views the time of the predicated situation referred to (⫽ the situation time) as either past or nonpast with respect to the time functioning as temporal zero-point (which is usually the moment of speech) This means that any tense form locates a situa-tion time either in the past time-sphere or in the present time-sphere These time-spheres are not objective physical entities but represent the ways in which

an English-language user conceptualizes time The past time-sphere is conceived

of as a time span of indefinite length which lies wholly before (and hence does not include) the temporal zero-point To locate a situation time in this time-sphere the speaker uses the preterite (past tense) The present time-time-sphere is

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conceived of as a time span of indefinite length which includes the zero-point

and is divided by it into three zones: the portion of the present time-sphere

that starts before the zero-point and leads up to it is the pre-present (zone);

the portion that coincides with the zero-point is the present (zone); and the

portion that follows the zero-point is the post-present (zone)

Time-zone (or zone): cover term for any of the four portions of time that

together make up the two spheres: the three parts of the present

time-sphere, namely the pre-present zone, the present zone and the post-present

zone, plus the past zone (which coincides with the past time-sphere) Since

these four zones (pre-present, present, post-present and past) are defined in

direct relation to the temporal zero-point, they constitute the set of absolute

zones (or absolute time-zones)

T-interpretation: (a) in general: temporal reading which is based on the

seman-tics (⫽ tense structure) of the chosen tense only; (b) in connection with the

present perfect: one of two possible readings that are compatible with the

se-mantics of this tense, namely a ‘before now’ interpretation (as in I have done

it) and a ‘co-extensive’ interpretation (as in Where have you been? or I’ve been

living here for years).

T-posterior: showing the relation of T-posteriority A given time A is

T-poste-rior to another time B if the speaker uses a tense form (such as the conditional

tense) to represents A as following B, i e as predicted or predictable (but not

yet a fact) at time B

T-posteriority: posteriority (futurity) expressed by a tense For example, inJim

said he would do it, the conditional tense form (would do) expresses

T-posteri-ority: it represents the situation time of Tim’s doing it as following the situation

time of his speaking

Transition: punctual change of one state into another.

Transition reading: punctual interpretation of a clause involving the use of a

transitional situation verb, as inHe died (as opposed to He was dying).

Transitional: ontological feature of a situation-template which consists in a

single transition, conceived of as punctual, from one state into another

Transitional situation: situation represented as involving, or consisting of, a

single, punctual change of one state into another (e g a death)

Transitional situation verb: verb likedie, kill, etc., which refers to a punctual

transition or, when the progressive form is used or a nonpunctual duration

adverbial is added, to the durative preparatory phase leading up to the

transi-tion in questransi-tion

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Transitive verb: (a) verb that is accompanied by a direct object as complement;

(b) verb like eat that can in principle take a direct object, even if it does not

do so in certain sentences (where it is used intransitively, i e without a comple-ment, e g.John is eating).

Transparent interpretation: interpretation in terms of the speaker’s actual

world For example, inJohn believes that Paris is the capital of Italy, the

that-clause is true in the intensional world of John’s belief, but not in (what the speaker knows to be) the actual world That is, Paris is the capital of Italy is

true on an intensional (opaque) interpretation, but not on a transparent one

T-relate: express a T-relation.

T-relation (or tense relation): temporal relation expressed by a tense form For

example, the future perfect, which is an absolute-relative tense, expresses two T-relations: ‘The time of the situation is anterior to an implicit time of orienta-tion’ and ‘the implicit time of orientation is posterior to the temporal zero-point’ (e g He will have left).

T-simultaneity: kind of T-relation: the situation time is linguistically

repre-sented as simultaneous with an orientation time T-simultaneity is by definition

a relation of strict coincidence Thus, in Meg said that she was feeling ill, the

situation time of Meg’s feeling ill is represented by the tense form as strictly coinciding with the situation time of Meg’s speaking, even though the W-rela-tion between the (actualizaW-rela-tions of) the two situaW-rela-tions is assumed to be one of W-simultaneity, i e overlap or inclusion

T-simultaneous: showing T-simultaneity A given orientation time A is

T-simul-taneous with an orientation time B if the speaker uses a tense form representing

A as coinciding with B

Type of situation: see situation type.

Unanchored time-specifying adverbial (or nondeictic time-specifying adverbial):

time-specifying adverbial which does not relate the Adv-time which it indicates

to a temporal anchor For example: in I’ve heard that name at some time or other, the Adv-time specified by at some time or other is anchored neither to

the temporal zero-point nor to a contextually given time

Unbounding constituent: clause constituent which removes the idea of a

tempo-ral right boundary, thus rendering the clause L-nonbounded, e g the constitu-entto party activists in Bill handed out the Labour Party badge to party activ-ists or the temporal adverbial in I will run the marathon for many more years.

Unembedded clause: syntactically independent clause See also matrix.

Unexpanded domain: temporal domain which consists of just one situation

time: the set of orientation times forming the domain is a singleton For

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exam-ple, inHe left at five and I will leave at eight, both tense forms establish a past

domain of their own which is not further expanded

Universal (or gnomic) sentence: sentence referring to a habit or other state

which holds at all times or at every time in the existence of the referent of the

subject (e g.Two and two is four; The sun rises in the east).

Unmarked interpretation: the interpretation which (failing any indication to

the contrary) the addressee or hearer will naturally assume to be the reading

that is intended by the speaker

Unmarked now reading (or unmarked now interpretation):

up-to-now reading (of a clause in the present perfect) which is not a constitution

reading, because it is not specificational For example:You’ve been thinking of

something else all the time I’ve been talking.

Unspecified orientation time: orientation time which has to be recovered from

the linguistic context For example, in the case of the sentenceBill had left the

room, the orientation time to which Bill’s leaving is related as T-anterior may

be the time of a predicated situation referred to in a previous sentence (as in

[When Megan woke up, it was no longer dark.] Bill had left the room), or it

may be an otherwise unspecified time contained in an Adv-time (e g.Yesterday

Bill had left the hotel) Only in the former case do we speak of an ‘unspecified

orientation time’

Untensed (or nontensed or tenseless) verb form: verb form which is not marked

for tense, i e which does not encode information about how a situation time

is related (directly or indirectly) to the temporal zero-point Nonfinite verb

forms and subjunctive verb forms are tenseless in this sense

Up-to-now perfect: shorthand for ‘present perfect used in a clause receiving an

up-to-now reading’

Up-to-now reading (or up-to-now interpretation): one of three possible

W-interpretations of a clause in the present perfect, namely that in which the full

situation fills the entire period leading up to the temporal zero-point (t0) but

does not include t0, thus coinciding with the situation time (which itself

coin-cides with the pre-present zone) Such a reading is assigned, for example, to

Where have you been?, when said to someone who has just come in.

Utterance: a structured set of words which a speaker or writer produces in the

form of speech sounds or letters A meaningful utterance is the physical form

of a sentence

Utterance-explaining because -clause: clause which is introduced by the

subordi-nating conjunction because and which explains why the speaker makes the

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