Tense

Front Cover
Cambridge University Press, Jun 6, 1985 - Language Arts & Disciplines - 139 pages
Bernard Comrie defines tense as the grammaticalisation of location in time. In this textbook he introduces readers to the range of variation found in tense systems across the languages of the world, bringing together a rich collection of illustrative material that student and specialist alike will find invaluable. This systematic account of the data is carefully integrated with a theoretical discussion of tense that is sensitive both to the range of tense oppositions found cross-linguistically and also to the constraints on that variation. For the most part the book is written without formalism, nor is it written within the framework of any specific current theory of linguistics. Nevertheless, as the final chapter makes clear, a formal theory of tense can build upon the insights gained here. For all readers, Dr Comrie's coherent and characteristically elegant account of this complex grammatical category will provide a solid basis for further research on tense, even in a language as thoroughly studied as English.
 

Contents

II
1
III
2
IV
7
V
9
VI
13
VII
18
VIII
23
IX
26
XVIII
64
XIX
83
XX
102
XXI
104
XXII
107
XXIII
117
XXIV
122
XXV
124

X
36
XI
41
XII
43
XIII
48
XIV
50
XV
53
XVI
56
XXVI
125
XXVII
129
XXIX
130
XXX
131
XXXI
134
XXXII
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