ABSTRACT

Constructions such as 'make an accusation against', or 'give one's approval for' can be seen as 'stretched' versions of simple verbs, such as 'accuse' or 'approve of'. What is the precise linguistic nature of stretched verbs, and how many basic types are there? What kinds of grammatical connections are involved, and what lexical limits are there on these constructions? What is their precise semantic value? These are some of the questions that this book sets out to answer in its investigation of stretched verb constructions.

part I|32 pages

Defining the field

chapter I.1|12 pages

Towards a definition of ‘kindred relations'

chapter I.2|15 pages

Stretched elaborated verb structures

chapter I.3|3 pages

Using data

part II|78 pages

Syntactic restructuring

chapter II.1|19 pages

Syntactic framework

chapter II.2|57 pages

Types of restructuring

part III|55 pages

The event phrase

chapter III.1|26 pages

Eventive and agentive noun phrases

Their core

chapter III.2|20 pages

Eventive and agentive noun phrases

Modifiers and qualifiers

chapter III.3|7 pages

Agentive adjective phrases

part IV|45 pages

The thin verb

part V|41 pages

The lexical status of stretched verb constructions

chapter V.1|24 pages

The semantics of stretched verb constructions

chapter V.2|15 pages

Stretched verb constructions and the lexicon