The -ing dynasty: Rebuilding the semantics of nominalizations

  • Grimm S
  • McNally L
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Abstract

The nature of -ing nominals has been widely debated since the early days of generative grammar (e.g. Lees 1960, Chomsky 1970), and at least since Vendler (1967), -ing forms also have played a central role in debates over natural language ontology for abstract objects. This paper attempts to simplify the ontology and account for the uses and interpretations a wide range of -ing forms using only a distinction between event types and event tokens. A core insight will be that the different constructions reflect different paths by which the -ing form may come to have type or token reference. A central contrast present among these different paths involves whether the event types/tokens are individuated through nominal morphology or through temporal anchoring.

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Grimm, S., & McNally, L. (2015). The -ing dynasty: Rebuilding the semantics of nominalizations. Semantics and Linguistic Theory, 25, 82. https://doi.org/10.3765/salt.v25i0.3070

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