zompist wrote: ↑Sun Jan 30, 2022 5:05 pm
zompist wrote: ↑Sat Jan 29, 2022 4:34 pm
Some verbs can't be both progressive, and given an interval: *I am considering/wanting/becoming/lasting from four to seven." Some don't seem to like the progressive at all: *I am having this property." (Note that this is non-auxiliary 'have', and "possess" doesn't improve it.)
But when discussing timetables,
I'm having the hall from three to five.. The problem with the initial examples appears to be incongruity. It is perfectly possible to say, 'I will be considering applications from four to seven'.
The first one doesn't work for me. Could be British?
Not quite, since it works for me too, not that I’d regularly use the construction myself. But AuE and SAE are both heavily British-influenced.
I do think (English) transitive verbs are divided into those which require an explicit object and those which merely allow one.
Does this differ in any way from the usual division into ‘transitive’ and ‘ambitransitive’ verbs, respectively?
What a verb requires— its elaborators, in David Allerton's terms— can be complex in English, beyond just transitive/intransitive. I purposely used "put on" in my examples, as it takes a PP as an elaborator. "Last" seems to require an adverbial (which can be a time NP).
Question: how complex can the required elaborators of a verb get? Aside from your examples (PP, adverbial), I can think of: direct quote (with ‘say’),
that- or
to-complement (‘know’, ‘like’),
that-complement alone (‘think’),
to-complement alone (‘want’),. Curiously, all of those verbs also accept a simple NP as their elaborator.
Beats me! / *The beating of me is a fine art.
I think we have the grammatical sentence 'The beating of the drum is a fine art'.
Of course, but "Beats me" is syntactically different from "I beat drums". It's an idiom, and in general idioms are restricted in idiosyncratic ways. They are still evidence that not all verbs act the same way, and I don't accept that evidence from idioms can be thrown out when inconvenient.
I disagree strongly on the last point… if an idiom is unproductive, and seems to follow very different rules to normal grammar, then ‘evidence’ from that idiom should
always be thrown out, even if it happens to be very convenient indeed (not that I can think of any examples where this might be the case). If something doesn’t obey normal syntax and is the
only construction in an entire language which is organised in one particular way, then it’s only sensible to ignore it when analysing normal syntax.
zompist wrote: ↑Sun Jan 30, 2022 5:32 pm
bradrn wrote: ↑Sun Jan 30, 2022 7:21 am
I suspect the differences here are almost entirely due to transitivity, and in obvious ways too. ‘Want’ and ‘put’ are both transitive; compare
I love to wish and
I love to throw, which are intransitive.
Um, "bake" is transitive too.
No, it’s ambitransitive:
I baked all day is fine with me.
"Put on clothes" is not transitive. "Put the X on the Y" has two elaborators.
OK, agreed, though it
does still have two required arguments.
Interestingly, I note that you can vary the preposition for the latter but not the former:
I put the phone on/in/under the bag
I put on/*in/*under the clothes
I think there is some miscommunication here. When I talk about something being ‘primitive’, I mean it in the programming sense: like one might say that ‘in JavaScript strings are a primitive type’, and so on. In this case, I mean that word classes should be defined such that later stages of analysis can just assume they exist; that is, such that they can be treated as primitives for syntactic analysis. I meant ‘inviolate’ in the same sense: the later stages don’t need to question whether ‘verbs’, say, form a coherent category. And ‘simple’ applies to each individual test: combining all the tests together can make the defining features for a single word class quite involved, in fact!
I agree with you that the end analysis may be a complex superposition of simple tests! And I've said many times that you can
start with morphological tests.
But perhaps because I value syntax more, I don't think you can say ahead of time that syntax won't make you change or even throw out your initial categories. Your prototypical verbs and nouns may well escape unscathed. But to take just one example, deciding what thing or things -
ing words are is going to be determined by syntax— morphology can't really answer this one at all.
Sorry, but I really don’t understand what you mean by any of this. Could you elaborate please?
Of course we can ask questions like ‘what does “impersonal” mean’; it means that the verb can only take ‘it’ as its subject. And how, exactly, does prototype theory give a ‘reason’ for all this‽
Kind of amusingly, you've
precisely escaped looking at what the word means. Im-person-al = not a person. Why is "it" different from other subjects? It's not a person. Impersonal verbs are non-prototypical in that they don't have a person as a subject.
Again, it's fine and desirable to start your morphosyntactic analysis without reference to semantics. This is mostly to avoid preconceptions. But at some point it's OK, in fact it's essential, to open the semantics box.
Why are stative verbs resistant to the progressive? Is it just unfathomable? I think it's relevant to the difference between prototypical states and prototypical events.
I absolutely agree that semantics is vital for further analysis! (And if you doubt me on this, just read a bit of my alignment thread, or my more recent posts on aspect — they’re full of semantics being used to explicate syntactic patterns. The interaction between semantics and syntax is perhaps the area I’m most interested in.) But in this thread, I’ve been focussing all along on the preliminary stages of analysis, where utilising semantics should be mostly avoided to, as you say, avoid preconceptions.
zompist wrote: ↑Sun Jan 30, 2022 8:17 pm
Richard W wrote: ↑Sun Jan 30, 2022 7:00 pm
zompist wrote: ↑Sun Jan 30, 2022 5:05 pm
I do think (English) transitive verbs are divided into those which require an explicit object and those which merely allow one. "Consider" seems to be the former ("Let me think. / ?Let me consider."); "bake" is the latter. For me at least, adding complements doesn't fix all of these: "*I am wanting pizza from 4 to 7"; "*I am becoming deaf from 4 to 7"; "*I am lasting surprisingly long from 4 to 7."
The last two work if they refer to repeated actions or times. The one with
last could refer to repeated brief endurance tests, e.g. holding one's breath under water, with performance oddly dependent on time of day. The second could refer to a repeated, temporary loss of hearing, or again, with a schedule.
Not for me-- they'd have to be "I {want pizza, go deaf, last suprisingly long} from 4 to 7."
I have a slight preference for your versions, though both variants (progressive and simple) work for me. But the most preferred way of stating this would be:
I have been lasting surprisingly long from 4 to 7, with the progressive perfect.