Aspects of the progressive in English and Icelandic

This dissertation presents a semantic analysis of the progressive of both English and Icelandic, the only two Germanic languages that generally are considered to have fully grammaticalized progressive constructions. The progressive is an aspectual category where the focus is on a single, dynamic...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Johannsdottir, Kristin M.
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2011
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/37100
id ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.2429-37100
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.2429-371002014-03-26T03:38:08Z Aspects of the progressive in English and Icelandic Johannsdottir, Kristin M. This dissertation presents a semantic analysis of the progressive of both English and Icelandic, the only two Germanic languages that generally are considered to have fully grammaticalized progressive constructions. The progressive is an aspectual category where the focus is on a single, dynamic event being in progress at a certain time – the reference time. It is generally considered to be a sub-category of the imperfective aspect, just like the habitual aspect, and one of the descriptions typically given for the progressive is that it cannot have a habitual reading. Similarly, stative predicates are categorized as imperfective but non-progressive. Nevertheless, both habitual sentences and stative predicates occur in the progressive; they then appear to have a slightly different meaning from the one they have when they occur in the simple past/present. I argue that the subtle meaning difference between progressive and non-progressive statives and habituals is in fact an implicature. Stative verbs are shifted to being events in order to take on one or more of the prototypical eventive properties, and as events they can occur in the progressive. In such cases they usually imply dynamicity, control and/or temporariness. Habituals are essentially stative so when they occur in the progressive they too have been shifted to events, resulting in the same implicature of prototypical eventive properties, particularly temporariness. We then get the reading that the habit is temporary and it contrasts with the simple past/present that picks out a more general habit. Additionally I investigate another way to indicate that a series of events is in progress, namely the present participle progressive in Icelandic, which is a progressive construction with a presupposition for pluractionality. It usually occurs with iterative adverbials, in particular adverbs of quantity, which give additional information on the frequency of the series of events. 2011-09-02T19:19:49Z 2011-09-02T19:19:49Z 2011 2011-09-02 2011-11 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/37100 eng University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description This dissertation presents a semantic analysis of the progressive of both English and Icelandic, the only two Germanic languages that generally are considered to have fully grammaticalized progressive constructions. The progressive is an aspectual category where the focus is on a single, dynamic event being in progress at a certain time – the reference time. It is generally considered to be a sub-category of the imperfective aspect, just like the habitual aspect, and one of the descriptions typically given for the progressive is that it cannot have a habitual reading. Similarly, stative predicates are categorized as imperfective but non-progressive. Nevertheless, both habitual sentences and stative predicates occur in the progressive; they then appear to have a slightly different meaning from the one they have when they occur in the simple past/present. I argue that the subtle meaning difference between progressive and non-progressive statives and habituals is in fact an implicature. Stative verbs are shifted to being events in order to take on one or more of the prototypical eventive properties, and as events they can occur in the progressive. In such cases they usually imply dynamicity, control and/or temporariness. Habituals are essentially stative so when they occur in the progressive they too have been shifted to events, resulting in the same implicature of prototypical eventive properties, particularly temporariness. We then get the reading that the habit is temporary and it contrasts with the simple past/present that picks out a more general habit. Additionally I investigate another way to indicate that a series of events is in progress, namely the present participle progressive in Icelandic, which is a progressive construction with a presupposition for pluractionality. It usually occurs with iterative adverbials, in particular adverbs of quantity, which give additional information on the frequency of the series of events.
author Johannsdottir, Kristin M.
spellingShingle Johannsdottir, Kristin M.
Aspects of the progressive in English and Icelandic
author_facet Johannsdottir, Kristin M.
author_sort Johannsdottir, Kristin M.
title Aspects of the progressive in English and Icelandic
title_short Aspects of the progressive in English and Icelandic
title_full Aspects of the progressive in English and Icelandic
title_fullStr Aspects of the progressive in English and Icelandic
title_full_unstemmed Aspects of the progressive in English and Icelandic
title_sort aspects of the progressive in english and icelandic
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/37100
work_keys_str_mv AT johannsdottirkristinm aspectsoftheprogressiveinenglishandicelandic
_version_ 1716656062774378496