On the margins of perception - TO-clauses: a standard construction of perception verbs?

The main objective of this corpus-based study is to provide an account for the fact that, contrary to what some grammars postulate, TO-infinitive clauses can be – and are – used in the complementation of perception verbs in the active. The analysis seeks to answer the underlying question of whether...

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Main Author: Christelle LACASSAIN-LAGOIN
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Laboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA) 2018-06-01
Series:E-REA
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/erea/6283
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spelling doaj-0cbf59263b59481b9963e67df71a03362020-11-25T00:02:27ZengLaboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA)E-REA1638-17182018-06-011510.4000/erea.6283On the margins of perception - TO-clauses: a standard construction of perception verbs?Christelle LACASSAIN-LAGOINThe main objective of this corpus-based study is to provide an account for the fact that, contrary to what some grammars postulate, TO-infinitive clauses can be – and are – used in the complementation of perception verbs in the active. The analysis seeks to answer the underlying question of whether the norms or usages mentioned in prescriptive or descriptive grammars influence the way speakers use such constructions (perception verb + NP + TO-infinitival), while confronting these norms and usages to evidence provided by attested examples. Three varieties of English – British, American and Canadian English – are thus compared so as to identify: how frequently TO-infinitivals occur as complements; which verbs take this type of complement; and in which variety and in which register they are frequently used. It is shown that the utterances provided by the corpora contradict the norms that are prescribed or described in grammars. The study puts forward a semantic explanation as to the (in)compatibility of perception verbs with TO-infinitivals, partly based on the types of these verbs. It also demonstrates that the sentences sometimes convey a meaning of sensory perception, even if an interpretation of mental judgement or inference – often mentioned in grammars – is more frequent.http://journals.openedition.org/erea/6283TO-infinitive complementsperception verbsactivenormsusages(non-)standard complements
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christelle LACASSAIN-LAGOIN
spellingShingle Christelle LACASSAIN-LAGOIN
On the margins of perception - TO-clauses: a standard construction of perception verbs?
E-REA
TO-infinitive complements
perception verbs
active
norms
usages
(non-)standard complements
author_facet Christelle LACASSAIN-LAGOIN
author_sort Christelle LACASSAIN-LAGOIN
title On the margins of perception - TO-clauses: a standard construction of perception verbs?
title_short On the margins of perception - TO-clauses: a standard construction of perception verbs?
title_full On the margins of perception - TO-clauses: a standard construction of perception verbs?
title_fullStr On the margins of perception - TO-clauses: a standard construction of perception verbs?
title_full_unstemmed On the margins of perception - TO-clauses: a standard construction of perception verbs?
title_sort on the margins of perception - to-clauses: a standard construction of perception verbs?
publisher Laboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA)
series E-REA
issn 1638-1718
publishDate 2018-06-01
description The main objective of this corpus-based study is to provide an account for the fact that, contrary to what some grammars postulate, TO-infinitive clauses can be – and are – used in the complementation of perception verbs in the active. The analysis seeks to answer the underlying question of whether the norms or usages mentioned in prescriptive or descriptive grammars influence the way speakers use such constructions (perception verb + NP + TO-infinitival), while confronting these norms and usages to evidence provided by attested examples. Three varieties of English – British, American and Canadian English – are thus compared so as to identify: how frequently TO-infinitivals occur as complements; which verbs take this type of complement; and in which variety and in which register they are frequently used. It is shown that the utterances provided by the corpora contradict the norms that are prescribed or described in grammars. The study puts forward a semantic explanation as to the (in)compatibility of perception verbs with TO-infinitivals, partly based on the types of these verbs. It also demonstrates that the sentences sometimes convey a meaning of sensory perception, even if an interpretation of mental judgement or inference – often mentioned in grammars – is more frequent.
topic TO-infinitive complements
perception verbs
active
norms
usages
(non-)standard complements
url http://journals.openedition.org/erea/6283
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