For-to Complement Clauses in English: A Cognitive Grammar Analysis

This paper seeks to substantiate two fundamental claims of Cognitive Grammar (CG) with regard to for‐to complement clauses used in verbal complementation. One claim is that all linguistic elements posited in grammar are ascribed some kind of conceptual import. On the basis of this claim, the paper a...

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Published inStudia linguistica Vol. 57; no. 3; pp. 171 - 192
Main Author Hamawand, Zeki
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Publishing 01.12.2003
Blackwell
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Summary:This paper seeks to substantiate two fundamental claims of Cognitive Grammar (CG) with regard to for‐to complement clauses used in verbal complementation. One claim is that all linguistic elements posited in grammar are ascribed some kind of conceptual import. On the basis of this claim, the paper argues that for‐to has not only a syntactic function but also meaning of its own which conditions its behaviour. The other claim is that the syntax of an expression is a reflection of its conceptual organisation, which represents the specific construal imposed on its content. On the basis of this claim, the paper argues that to‐infinitive complement clauses represent a self‐related construal in the sense of reflecting the main clause subject's involvement in the complement event, and so implying his/her high degree of interest in its realisation. By contrast, for‐to complement clauses represent an other‐related construal in the sense of reflecting the main clause subject's distance from the complement event, and so implying his/her low degree of interest in its realisation.
Bibliography:ark:/67375/WNG-HF18SLVW-4
ArticleID:STUL103
istex:EB35E6DD9E03FD4A7CA0DDBF3CC71A8BCF51484F
This paper is a reviesed version of collected meaterial from my doctoral thesis (Hamawand 2002), which was presented at the University of Hamburg in December 2001.
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content type line 23
ISSN:0039-3193
1467-9582
DOI:10.1111/j.0039-3193.2003.00103.x