From Ambiguity to Deceptiveness: the Case of Hybrid since- Subordinates in English

When since is used as a subordinator,it can introduce either a temporal adverbial clause or a causal one. My purpose in this paper is to study cases in which such a polysemy at the level of the subordinator results in the production of subordinates whose meaning proves to be ambiguous between the ca...

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Main Author: Bénédicte GUILLAUME
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Laboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA) 2012-03-01
Series:E-REA
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/erea/2396
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author Bénédicte GUILLAUME
author_facet Bénédicte GUILLAUME
author_sort Bénédicte GUILLAUME
collection DOAJ
description When since is used as a subordinator,it can introduce either a temporal adverbial clause or a causal one. My purpose in this paper is to study cases in which such a polysemy at the level of the subordinator results in the production of subordinates whose meaning proves to be ambiguous between the categories of time and cause. In addition to the taking into account of the context, whether exophoric or endophoric, I put forward a series of syntactic criteria which should help disambiguate between the two possible interpretations. These are based on the study of the characteristics of nearly five-hundred examples of since- clauses taken from the one-hundred-million-word British National Corpus of contemporary English. Still, a handful of examples resist such a disambiguation, thus matching my definition of a ‘hybrid subordinate’ as a clause which challenges the traditional categorisation of subordinates in English, as it happens to possess at least one property which is not in keeping with the type to which it ought to belong according to most of its other characteristics. Such cases call for the grammar of any given language to allow for a ‘remainder’, to borrow Jean-Jacques Lecercle’s term.
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spelling doaj-art-ecd7bed2996e4a3e8365394e5acbb6252025-01-09T12:52:36ZengLaboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA)E-REA1638-17182012-03-019210.4000/erea.2396From Ambiguity to Deceptiveness: the Case of Hybrid since- Subordinates in EnglishBénédicte GUILLAUMEWhen since is used as a subordinator,it can introduce either a temporal adverbial clause or a causal one. My purpose in this paper is to study cases in which such a polysemy at the level of the subordinator results in the production of subordinates whose meaning proves to be ambiguous between the categories of time and cause. In addition to the taking into account of the context, whether exophoric or endophoric, I put forward a series of syntactic criteria which should help disambiguate between the two possible interpretations. These are based on the study of the characteristics of nearly five-hundred examples of since- clauses taken from the one-hundred-million-word British National Corpus of contemporary English. Still, a handful of examples resist such a disambiguation, thus matching my definition of a ‘hybrid subordinate’ as a clause which challenges the traditional categorisation of subordinates in English, as it happens to possess at least one property which is not in keeping with the type to which it ought to belong according to most of its other characteristics. Such cases call for the grammar of any given language to allow for a ‘remainder’, to borrow Jean-Jacques Lecercle’s term.https://journals.openedition.org/erea/2396sincesubordinate clausescorpuscontextambiguityhybridism
spellingShingle Bénédicte GUILLAUME
From Ambiguity to Deceptiveness: the Case of Hybrid since- Subordinates in English
E-REA
since
subordinate clauses
corpus
context
ambiguity
hybridism
title From Ambiguity to Deceptiveness: the Case of Hybrid since- Subordinates in English
title_full From Ambiguity to Deceptiveness: the Case of Hybrid since- Subordinates in English
title_fullStr From Ambiguity to Deceptiveness: the Case of Hybrid since- Subordinates in English
title_full_unstemmed From Ambiguity to Deceptiveness: the Case of Hybrid since- Subordinates in English
title_short From Ambiguity to Deceptiveness: the Case of Hybrid since- Subordinates in English
title_sort from ambiguity to deceptiveness the case of hybrid since subordinates in english
topic since
subordinate clauses
corpus
context
ambiguity
hybridism
url https://journals.openedition.org/erea/2396
work_keys_str_mv AT benedicteguillaume fromambiguitytodeceptivenessthecaseofhybridsincesubordinatesinenglish