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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Phrasal Constructions and Resultativeness in English

A sign-oriented analysis

Marina Gorlach
Metropolitan State College of Denver

2004. x, 151 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 1561 1 / EUR 95.00
978 1 58811 597 3 / USD 143.00
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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9485 2 / EUR 95.00 / USD 143.00
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Eat up the apple or Eat the apple up? Is there any difference in the messages each of these alternative forms sends? If there isn’t, why bother to keep both? On the other hand, is there any semantic similarity between eat the apple up and break the glass to pieces? This study takes a fresh look at a still controversial issue of phrasal verbs and their alternate word order applying sign-oriented theory and methodology. Unlike other analyses, it asserts that there is a semantic distinction between the two word order variants phrasal verbs may appear in. In order to test this distinction, the author analyzes a large corpus of data and also uses translation into a language having a clear morphological distinction between resultative/non-resultative forms (Russian). As follows from the analysis, English has morphological and syntactic tools to express resultative meaning, which allows suggesting a new lexico-grammatical category – resultativeness.


Table of contents

List of tables
List of figures
Abstract
Introduction
1–4
1. The sign-oriented approach
5–20
2. Phrasal constructions and resultative meaning
21–45
3. Resultativeness
47–65
4. Microlevel analysis
67–98
5. Macrolevel Analysis
99–124
Conclusion
125–127
Notes
129–131
References
133–142
Index
143–150