This paper shows that the Gerund Phrase (GP) in the Spanish Gerund Construction (e.g., El jefe entró a su oficina corriendo, lit. ‘The boss entered his office running’) is sometimes a complement (in SGCC) and sometimes an adjunct (in SGCA). Although in both cases, the GP expresses a non-argument of the main lexical verb's denotation, it is a syntactic adjunct in SGCA and a syntactic dependent of the main clause’s head in SGCC. We argue that there is a semantic correlate of this syntactic difference and propose a general principle that constrains the semantic relations that can hold between the denotata of heads and added members of their ARG-ST lists: The two denotata must be part of a larger macro-event in the sense of Talmy (2000). W...
This paper criticizes traditional definitions of the gerund for inadequately distinguishing between ...
ENGLISH SUMMARYFunctional-Cognitive Corpus Study of the English Gerund and its SpanishEquivalents T...
This study is concerned with the Present-day English use of gerunds, nominal (as in [1]) and verbal ...
This article examines the discourse pragmatic functions of external gerund clauses. Using corpus dat...
This dissertation investigates the theory of phrase structure in the field of generative grammar. In...
This paper re-examines the semantics of Present-day English gerunds by analyzing their collocational...
© 2015 SAGE Publications The English gerund system consists of two types of gerunds: a nominal gerun...
There have been remarkable works on semantic transitivity although they are, to a certain extent, li...
There have been remarkable works on semantic transitivity although they are, to a certain extent, li...
This article offers a cognitive perspective on the evolution of the semantics of English nominal ger...
Proceedings of the Twentieth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society: General Session Ded...
The network of English -ing forms covers a broad range of interrelated constructions, ranging from f...
In catalan, free adjuncts with a gerund after the main clause are mostly considered acceptable if th...
This paper deals with certain constructions in which gerund seems to function as a verbal head in a...
Indefinite and bare nominal gerunds in PD English: towards a functional account This paper discusses...
This paper criticizes traditional definitions of the gerund for inadequately distinguishing between ...
ENGLISH SUMMARYFunctional-Cognitive Corpus Study of the English Gerund and its SpanishEquivalents T...
This study is concerned with the Present-day English use of gerunds, nominal (as in [1]) and verbal ...
This article examines the discourse pragmatic functions of external gerund clauses. Using corpus dat...
This dissertation investigates the theory of phrase structure in the field of generative grammar. In...
This paper re-examines the semantics of Present-day English gerunds by analyzing their collocational...
© 2015 SAGE Publications The English gerund system consists of two types of gerunds: a nominal gerun...
There have been remarkable works on semantic transitivity although they are, to a certain extent, li...
There have been remarkable works on semantic transitivity although they are, to a certain extent, li...
This article offers a cognitive perspective on the evolution of the semantics of English nominal ger...
Proceedings of the Twentieth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society: General Session Ded...
The network of English -ing forms covers a broad range of interrelated constructions, ranging from f...
In catalan, free adjuncts with a gerund after the main clause are mostly considered acceptable if th...
This paper deals with certain constructions in which gerund seems to function as a verbal head in a...
Indefinite and bare nominal gerunds in PD English: towards a functional account This paper discusses...
This paper criticizes traditional definitions of the gerund for inadequately distinguishing between ...
ENGLISH SUMMARYFunctional-Cognitive Corpus Study of the English Gerund and its SpanishEquivalents T...
This study is concerned with the Present-day English use of gerunds, nominal (as in [1]) and verbal ...