02768nam 2200673 a 450 991078024490332120230607214151.00-511-04736-30-511-15410-00-511-01777-4(CKB)111087027188860(EBL)201386(OCoLC)70752654(SSID)ssj0000103267(PQKBManifestationID)11132822(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000103267(PQKBWorkID)10069924(PQKB)11106824(MiAaPQ)EBC201386(Au-PeEL)EBL201386(CaPaEBR)ebr5006347(EXLCZ)9911108702718886020000525d2001 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrAncient epistolary fictions[electronic resource] the letter in Greek literature /Patricia A. RosenmeyerCambridge ;New York Cambridge University Press20011 online resource (382 p.)Description based upon print version of record.0-521-80004-8 Includes bibliographical references (p. 347-362) and index.Cover; Half-title; Title; Copyright; Dedication; Contents; Acknowledgments; Prologue; I Epistolarity: an introduction; II Epistolary fictions; III The epistolary novel; IV Epistolography in the Second Sophistic; Afterword; Bibliography; IndexThe first comprehensive look at the use of imaginary letters in Greek literature. The book challenges the notion that Ovid 'invented' the fictional letter form in the Heroides, and considers a wealth of Greek antecedents for the later European epistolary novel tradition.Greek literatureHistory and criticismLetters in literatureEpistolary fiction, GreekHistory and criticismEpistolary poetry, GreekHistory and criticismImaginary lettersHistory and criticismGreek lettersHistory and criticismLetter writing, GreekHistoryGreek literatureHistory and criticism.Letters in literature.Epistolary fiction, GreekHistory and criticism.Epistolary poetry, GreekHistory and criticism.Imaginary lettersHistory and criticism.Greek lettersHistory and criticism.Letter writing, GreekHistory.883/.0109Rosenmeyer Patricia A188207MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910780244903321Ancient epistolary fictions305501UNINA08934nam 22006013 450 991098567770332120231110222800.09789027254481(electronic bk.)9789027213143(MiAaPQ)EBC30339932(Au-PeEL)EBL30339932(CKB)26027682200041(OCoLC)1363818818(EXLCZ)992602768220004120230121d2023 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrier<<The>> Spanish and the Portuguese present perfect in discourseLukas Müller1st ed.Amsterdam/PhiladelphiaJohn Benjamins Publishing Company2023©2023.1 online resource (296 pages)Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today vol. 279Print version: Müller, Lukas The Spanish and the Portuguese Present Perfect in Discourse Amsterdam/Philadelphia : John Benjamins Publishing Company,c2023 9789027213143 Intro -- The Spanish and the Portuguese Present Perfect in Discourse -- Editorial page -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Epigraph page -- Table of contents -- List of figures -- List of tables -- List of abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- Chapter 1. Introduction -- 1.1 A cross-linguistic perspective on the PPCpt and the PPCsp -- PPCpt and PPCsp as quantificational tense forms -- 1.2 The discursive approach -- The truth-conditional meaning component of tense forms -- The perspectival structure in discourse -- The event-referential structure in discourse -- 1.3 Goals of the study -- Chapter 2. Fundamentals -- 2.1 Tense -- 2.1.1 The ingredients of tense -- Speech time (ts) -- Event time (te) -- Location time (tloc) -- Perspective time (tp) -- Referencetime (tr) -- Integrating the ingredients -- 2.1.2 Quantificational vs. referential tense -- Quantificational tense -- Referential Tense -- A note on definiteness -- Integrating the two accounts -- 2.2 Aspect -- 2.2.1 Situation aspect -- 2.2.2 Viewpoint aspect -- 2.3 Adverbials -- 2.4 Tense and aspect in discourse -- 2.4.1 The macro-structure: Modes of discourse -- Narrative / Narration -- Report -- Description -- Information -- Argument -- 2.4.2 The micro-structure: Syntagmatic relations -- Temporal Anaphora -- Quantification and reference in discourse: Actualization effects -- 2.5 The Present Perfect as a cross-linguistic category -- 2.5.1 Diachrony and grammaticalization -- Stage I -- Stage II -- Stage III -- Stage IV -- Overview -- 2.5.2 Synchrony -- Readings -- Curent relevance -- The Present Perfect: A quantificational tense form -- The PP puzzle -- Adverbial modification -- 2.6 Conclusion -- Chapter 3. The Portuguese Pretérito Perfeito Composto -- 3.1 General meaning and meaning effects -- Ilari's (2001) account -- The Extended-Now (XN) approach to the PPCpt.The functional split of the PPCpt and the Simple Past -- Continuation of te after ts: Implication or implicature? -- 3.2 A note on diatopic variation -- 3.3 Quantificational readings -- 3.3.1 Ipex readings -- Ipex as a combination of indefiniteness and pluractionality -- Iterative vs. gradual readings -- 3.3.2 Universal reading -- 3.3.3 Characterizing readings -- Characterizing readings temporally restricted to the present time-sphere -- 3.3.4 Overview -- A diachronic note: The PPCpt's evolution as a "regular idiosyncrasy"? -- 3.4 Adverbials -- 3.5 Discourse -- 3.5.1 PPCpt + PPCpt -- 3.5.2 PPCpt + Pretérito Perfeito Simples -- Contrasting episodicity and genericity -- Perspectival bridging -- 3.5.3 PPCpt + Present Tense -- Contrast of characterizing PPCpt vs. generic Present Tense -- PPCpt providing evidence for generic Present Tense -- 3.5.4 The macro-structure of discourse -- 3.6 Conclusion -- Chapter 4. The Spanish Pretérito Perfecto Compuesto -- 4.1 General meaning and meaning effects -- The quantificational readings -- Current Relevance (CR) -- 4.2 A note on diatopic variation -- 4.3 Quantificational readings -- 4.3.1 Experiential reading -- A terminological note on experiential readings as a hyponym of the existential readings -- 4.3.2 Resultative reading -- The direct resultant state -- Delimiting PPCsp-res from the tener + participle -- 4.3.3 Hot news reading -- 4.3.4 Universal reading -- Competition with Present Tense -- Current Relevance or direct resultant state? -- 4.3.5 Overview -- 4.4 Is there a referential reading? -- The semantics of the potential referential PPCsp-ref -- Evidence for the PPCsp-ref -- Arguments supporting a purely quantificational account -- The quantificational/referential ambiguity as a transitional context? -- 4.5 Adverbials -- 4.6 Discourse -- Previous work -- 4.6.1 PPCsp + PPCsp -- 4.6.2 PPCsp + Indefinido.Actualization Focus -- Perspectival shift -- Perspectival bridging -- 4.6.3 PPCsp + Pluscuamperfecto/Imperfecto -- Quantificational PPCsp clashing with Pluscuamperfecto/Imperfecto -- Referential PPCsp anchoring Imperfecto/Pluscuamperfecto? -- The cataphoric potential as evidence for the PPCsp-ref? -- 4.6.4 The macro-structure of discourse -- 4.7 Conclusion -- The quantificational PPCsp -- The referential PPCsp and the referential drift -- Chapter 5. Corpus study -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.1.1 Composition of the corpus -- The Spanish corpus -- The Portuguese corpus -- 5.1.2 Analysis of the data -- 5.1.3 Overall frequencies -- 5.2 Adverbials -- 5.2.1 Expectations -- 5.2.2 Portuguese -- 5.2.3 Spanish -- Are there positional adverbials in the Spanish data? -- 5.2.4 Discussion -- 5.3 The micro-structure of discourse -- 5.3.1 Expectations -- Portuguese -- Spanish -- 5.3.2 Portuguese -- 5.3.2.1 Characterizing PPCPT -- 5.3.2.2 Episodic PPCPT readings -- 5.3.3 Spanish -- 5.3.3.1 Quantificational PPCSP -- 5.3.3.2 Referential PPCSP -- 5.3.4 Discussion -- Portuguese -- Similarities between the PPCPT's and PPCSP's discourse functions -- Spanish -- The PPC between truth conditions and discourse: A case for use conditions? -- 5.4 Conclusion -- PPCPT escaping from stage II and PPCSP approaching stage IV? -- Chapter 6. The PPCSP's referential drift -- 6.1 The PPCSP between quantification and reference -- "Gradual relaxation of the degree of recentness" -- Temporal indeterminacy -- Temporal semantics vs. discourse functions -- Perspectival clash -- 6.2 The attached Imperfecto as a test case for the PPCSP's cataphoric potential -- Contextual dependency and anaphoricity -- Perspective -- Tempus relief -- 6.3 Prominence and the PPCSP -- 6.3.1 General remarks on prominence in discourse -- 6.3.2 Prominent event domain vs. prominent post state domain.Singling out an element out of a set of equals -- The prominent event domain as a structural attractor licensing discursive operations -- 6.4 Experiment: Acceptability judgements of PPCSP + Imperfecto -- 6.4.1 Methodology -- Participants -- Procedure -- Design and materials -- The tense condition -- The remoteness condition -- The attached Imperfecto -- Hypotheses and expectations -- Diatopic variation -- 6.4.2 Statistical analysis and results -- Participants included in the analysis -- Overview -- Significant main effect of tense (H1) -- Significant interactional effect of PPC and remoteness (H2) -- No significant effect for coarse-grained diatopic background as a fixed effect -- 6.4.3 Discussion -- General observations -- Significant main effect of tense (H1) -- Significant effect of remoteness in the PPCSP condition (H2) -- Further exploration: Fine-grained diatopic background of the participants -- Further exploration: Innovative vs. conservative speakers? -- 6.5 Conclusion -- Chapter 7. Conclusions -- 7.1 PPCPT and PPCSP as quantificational tense forms -- 7.2 Similarities and differences on the level of discourse -- 7.3 Outlook -- Bibliography -- List of items included in the experiment -- Index.This monograph presents a theoretical and empirical study of the Spanish and the Portuguese Present Perfect (PP).Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today Spanish languageTensePortuguese languageTenseSpanish languageAspectPortuguese languageAspectSpanish languageDiscourse analysisPortuguese languageDiscourse analysisSpanish languageTense.Portuguese languageTense.Spanish languageAspect.Portuguese languageAspect.Spanish languageDiscourse analysis.Portuguese languageDiscourse analysis.465/.62Müller Lukas1792916MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQ9910985677703321Spanish and the Portuguese present perfect in discourse4332067UNINA