Article published In: International Journal of Corpus Linguistics
Vol. 12:3 (2007) ► pp.297–333
Lexical-grammatical patterns in spoken English
The case of the progressive with future time reference
Published online: 16 October 2007
https://doi.org/10.1075/ijcl.12.3.02nes
https://doi.org/10.1075/ijcl.12.3.02nes
Based on a large set of data from one of the biggest available corpora of spoken British English (the 10-million word spoken component of the BNC), this article explores central lexical-grammatical aspects of progressive forms with future time reference. Among the phenomena investigated are verb preferences, adverbial co-selection, subject types, and negation. It is demonstrated that future time progressives in spoken British English are patterned to a considerable extent (for example that it is individual verbs, rather than semantic groups of verbs, that preferably occur in such constructions) and that actual language use often runs counter to claims that can be found in traditional grammatical descriptions of the construction. A number of general and often neglected issues in the analysis of lexical-grammatical patterns are also addressed, in particular the notion of pattern frequency.
Cited by (6)
Cited by six other publications
Tantucci, Vittorio & Aiqing Wang
Hanks, Elizabeth
2023. Review of Love (2020): Overcoming challenges in corpus construction: The Spoken British National Corpus 2014. Register Studies 5:1 ► pp. 136 ff.
Liu, Siqi
Love, Robbie, Claire Dembry, Andrew Hardie, Vaclav Brezina & Tony McEnery
Gabriele, Alison, José Alemán Bañón, Beatriz López Prego & Alonso Canales
2015. Chapter 5. Examining the influence of transfer and prototypes on the acquisition of the present progressive in L2 Spanish. In The Acquisition of the Present, ► pp. 113 ff.
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