Abstract
Résumé
This paper offers a diachronic analysis of a pair of subject complement constructions (répondre présent/absent:
litt. ‘to answer “present”/“absent”) originating from quotative expressions. It shows how they lexicalized into fixed expressions
denoting a routinized “delocutive” (Benveniste) procedure and how they finally got reanalyzed into a subject complement
construction with an internalized projective and proactive meaning (“to act as expected”). The latter appears to be the result of
the pragmatic strengthening of conversational implicatures related to the speech act. Further, it is argued that the remarkably
similar evolution of répondre absent is due to analogization. Finally, the discussion of potential further host
class expansion leads to a provisional answer to the question of whether or not these developments could be the symptoms of the
constructionalization of a new copular verb.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
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