In:Motivation in Grammar and the Lexicon
Edited by Klaus-Uwe Panther and Günter Radden
[Human Cognitive Processing 27] 2011
► pp. 89–106
The cognitive motivation for the use of dangling participles in English
Published online: 29 June 2011
https://doi.org/10.1075/hcp.27.07hay
https://doi.org/10.1075/hcp.27.07hay
Dangling participles are considered incorrect usage in written Standard English. Nonetheless, dangling participles enjoy widespread usage, particularly in spoken English. This paper argues that the use of dangling participles is semantically and cognitively motivated. In adopting a usage-based view and analyzing attested data from the British National Corpus, this study shows that constructions with a dangling participle describe a coherent “cognizance scenario” as their constructional meaning. The dangling participial construction evokes a conceptualizer who conceives the situation described in the main clause. Thanks to its constructional semantics, the dangling participle is especially common in text genres which focus on the interaction with the hearer.
Cited by (5)
Cited by five other publications
WU, XIA & BIN SHAO
Duffley, Patrick J. & Samuel Dion-Girardeau
Hayase, Naoko
2014. The motivation for using English suspended dangling participles. In Usage-Based Approaches to Language Change [Studies in Functional and Structural Linguistics, 69], ► pp. 117 ff.
[no author supplied]
[no author supplied]
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