Bolinger Principle
Infinitives expresses something “hypothetical, future, unfulfilled”.
*want and hope
Ex. I want to go there.
Gerunds expresses something “real, vivid, fulfilled”.
*enjoy and avoid
Ex. Max enjoys swimming.
Bolinger’s principle also explains the frequent difference in meaning.
Ex. I remember locking the door.
I remembered to lock the door.
Infinitive of purpose- is a reduced adverbial clause added to structurally complete clause. It provides additional information that answers the questions “Why?” or “For what purpose?”
Ex. Jane has gone on a diet in order to lose weight.
Factive Verbs and Adjectives
Paul and Carol Kiparsky (1970) use categories factive and nonfactive.
| | Take subject complements | Take object complements |
| Factive predicates | Be significant Be odd Make sense | Regret Appreciate Avoid |
| Nonfactive | Be sure Be likely Turn out | Suppose Claim believe |
Semantically, factive and nonfactive predicates can be distinguish by examining the presupposition associated with the complement.
Predicate of the main clause is factive if the presupposition remains constant regardless of whether the predicate of the main clause affirms, negates, or questions the complement clause.
e.g.:
John doesn’t regret that he told you a lie ?
Does John regret
Complements of nonfactive predicates undergo predictable changes in the presupposition depending on whether the predicate of the main clause affirms, negates, or questions the complement.
e.g.:
John doesn’t claim that he told you a lie ?
Does john claim
Kiparsky’s semantic distinction ties in nicely with the use of infinitives and gerunds: in most cases, the complements of factive predicates must be reduced to gerunds or to possessive inflections plus gerunds (e.g., John’s doing that annoyed me), while the complements of nonfactive predicates must be reduced to infinitives, e.g.:
John regrets telling you that lie .
Nonfactive:
John claims to have told you that lie .
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