RESULTATIVE VS. CAUSATIVE EVENT FRAMING:
DESCRIPTION, MODELLING, PROBLEMS Cover Image

RESULTATIVE VS. CAUSATIVE EVENT FRAMING: DESCRIPTION, MODELLING, PROBLEMS
RESULTATIVE VS. CAUSATIVE EVENT FRAMING: DESCRIPTION, MODELLING, PROBLEMS

Author(s): Christoph Haase
Subject(s): Morphology, Syntax, Lexis
Published by: Masarykova univerzita nakladatelství
Keywords: causation; causativity; resultatives; constructions; lexical aspect; verb classes; event frames; complementation;

Summary/Abstract: This contribution looks into special properties of English causative verbs that show a wide spectrum of distribution patterns. These verbs extend their canonical complementation frames (as transitives) as these constructions show aberrant behaviour in transitivity and telicity. The study attempts to show the close link between causativity, telicity and resultativity in events lexicalised in English. From an observed deficiency of telic verbs as a class and telicity in the Vendlerian sense itself as a verb classifier, the paper argues for a primacy of resultativity and the need for a formal description and subsequent modelling of event structures via the resultative – non-resultative dichotomy, which for some is rather a cline than a dichotomy. Resultativity is empirically derived as an emerging property out of a proper analysis of the features of verbal events. For this end, events will be classified according to their lexical-temporal profile and according to the semantic parameters of their causative resultativity.

  • Issue Year: 2/2009
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 33-47
  • Page Count: 15
  • Language: English