In:A Construction Grammar of the English Language: CASA – a Constructionist Approach to Syntactic Analysis
Thomas Herbst and Thomas Hoffmann
[Cognitive Linguistics in Practice 5] 2024
► pp. 43–69
Chapter 4The roles of verbs
Published online: 24 October 2024
https://doi.org/10.1075/clip.5.c4
https://doi.org/10.1075/clip.5.c4
Article outline
- 4.1Introduction
- 4.1.1Language acquisition and adult language use
- 4.1.2A methodological question
- 4.2Expressing different degrees of certainty
- 4.2.1Yes, no, possibly or perhaps
- 4.2.2The English modals
- 4.2.3Form and meaning of modal constructions
- 4.2.4Combining modal and other constructions
- 4.3Using verbs to refer to time
- 4.3.1Problems of the morphological analysis of English verb forms
- 4.3.2Tense and person constructions
- 4.3.2.1Present and past-tense constructions
- 4.3.2.2Combining tense constructions with other constructions
- 4.3.3Referring to the future
- 4.3.3.1Referring to future time with the will construction
- 4.3.3.2The be-going-to-v construction
- 4.3.4Other multi-word constructions used to express ‘time’
- 4.4The progressive construction
- 4.5The perfective construction
- 4.5.1Form and meaning of the perfective construction
- 4.5.2Relating the perfective construction to other constructions
- 4.6The passive construction
- 4.6.1Active and passive
- 4.6.2Combining the passive construction with other constructions
- 4.7More complex combinations
- 4.8Subjunctive mood constructions
- 4.9Negation and the do-support construction
Notes
