LEADER 00000cam 2200421Ki 4500
001 1151897310
003 OCoLC
005 20200913232921.0
008 200403s2020 gw a b 001 0 eng d
020 9783110666076|q(hbk.)
020 3110666073|q(hbk.)
020 |z9783110669695|q(epdf)
020 |z9783110666311|q(epub)
035 (OCoLC)1151897310|z(OCoLC)1109973249
040 ERASA|beng|erda|cERASA|dYDXIT|dOCLCO|dYDX|dOCLCF|dQGE
|dOCLCQ|dSTF|dAS
050 4 PE1369|b.G46 2020
082 04 425|223
100 1 Gentens, Caroline,|eauthor
245 14 The factive-reported distinction in English /|cCaroline
Gentens
264 1 Berlin ;|aBoston :|bDe Gruyter Mouton,|c[2020]
264 4 |c©2020
300 xvii, 253 pages :|billustrations ;|c24 cm
336 text|btxt|2rdacontent
337 unmediated|bn|2rdamedia
338 volume|bnc|2rdacarrier
490 1 Trends in linguistics. Studies and monographs [TiLSM],
|x1861-4302 ;|vvolume 342
504 Includes bibliographical references (pages 241-249) and
index
505 00 |gAcknowledgements --|gFigures --|gTables --
|gAbbreviations --|gIntroduction --|tThe what, why, and
how in brief --|tPrior definitions of factivity :
Disparate views --|tThe factive presupposition --|tFrom
philosophy to logical semantics --|tPragmatic
presupposition --|tInterpersonal value of the factive
presupposition --|tEntity types --|tInterpersonal marking
in complement clauses --|tFunctional layers : grammatical
restrictions on entity types --|tFunctional layers :
grammatical restrictions on factive complements --
|tAsserted complement clauses and main clause phenomena --
|tThe alternative approach : representational and
interpersonal semantics --|tFactive complement clauses as
nominalized clauses --|tFormal approaches --|tCognitive-
functional approaches --|tThe matching problem :
complement types and complement-taking predicates --|tAims
--|tRepresentational semantics --|tIntroduction --|tA
three-way semantic classification --|tThe semantic
classification in simple clauses : creation and
manipulation --|tCreated vs. pre-existent objects --
|tManipulated vs. unaffected pre-existent objects --|tThe
two parameters combined --|tThe semantic classification of
finite complement clauses --|tCreated vs. pre-existent
clauses --|tManipulated vs. unaffected clauses --|tThe two
parameters combined --|tAspectual analysis --|tTheoretical
prerequisites : situation types --|tAnalysis --|tReporting
constructions --|tManipulative constructions --|tFactive
constructions --|tConclusion --|tInterpersonal semantics :
Modality --|tIntroduction --|tModality --|tThe
interpersonal status of modal auxiliaries --|tModality as
expressed by the indicative --|tSpeaker-related modal
auxiliaries in complement clauses --|tModalized
attestations of reporting, manipulative, and factive
complement clauses --|tAnalysis of modal stance patterns :
introduction --|tIndirect speech or thought constructions
--|tFactive constructions --|tFactive constructions with
cognitive predicates --|tFactive constructions with
emotive predicates --|tManipulative constructions --
|tConclusion --|tObject extraposition --|tIntroduction --
|tTheoretical background : factivity and, or givenness --
|tMethodology : data --|tObject extraposition and
givenness --|tReferential givenness --|tDiscourse
givenness --|tHearer givenness --|tRelational givenness --
|tObject extraposition and factivity --|tObject
extraposition : only in factive constructions? --|tThe
grammar and form of extraposed object clauses --
|tDiscursive meaning : emphatic assertion --|tThe
aspectual construal induced by object extraposition --
|tFactive constructions : aspectual construal by object
extraposition --|tManipulative constructions : aspectual
construal by object extraposition --|tA constructional
semantics for object extraposition : occurrential it --
|tConclusion --|tThe diachrony of the fact that-clauses --
|tIntroduction --|tMethodology : data --|tTheoretical
background --|tThe diachrony of the fact that-clauses --
|tContexts with restricted alternation --|tThe matching
problem : factive, manipulative, or reporting contexts --
|tThe semantic value of fact in Late Modern English :
truth presupposition? --|tConclusion --|tI regret (to say)
: From factive to reporting construction --|tIntroduction
--|tTheoretical background --|tParentheticals --|tThe case
of regret --|tMethodology : Corpora and data extraction --
|tA synchronic analysis : Discourse contexts for I regret
(to say) --|tA diachronic analysis : the development of to
-infinitives and reported speech patterns --|tEarly Modern
English --|tLate Modern English --|tProductivity of the
diachronic development --|tConclusion --|tConclusions --
|tSumming up --|tBrief outlook --|gReferences --|gIndex
520 8 This study offers a reconceptualization of the factive
presupposition. It presents a cognitive-functional account
based on three central features: the event structure of
semantic classes of matrix predicates, the sources of
modal stances in the complement clause, and the coercive
potential of predicate-complement combinations. In this
way the study complements the dominant formal pragmatic
and formal syntactic theories on factivity
650 0 English language|xSyntax
650 7 English language|xSyntax.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst00911850
830 0 Trends in linguistics.|pStudies and monographs ;|v342