The coding of perfect meaning in African, Asian and Caribbean Englishes. Suárez-Gómez, C. English Language & Linguistics, 23(3):509–529, September, 2019.
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The perfect in World Englishes has attracted much attention recently, especially from a semasiological perspective, in which the analytic have + participle is analysed in comparison with the synthetic preterite. This article intends to achieve a more holistic picture of the expression of perfect meaning in World Englishes, which allows us to identify how perfect meaning is expressed in all pragmatic contexts. In this study, all the occurrences of ten high-frequency verbs are examined in order to single out those expressing perfect meaning. The corpus (8.8m words in total) includes ten components of the International Corpus of English: eight Outer Circle varieties from Africa, Asia and the Caribbean, and two reference varieties: British and American English. The relevant examples are tabulated across variables such as presence of adverbials, type of perfect meaning, lexical verb, mode, text type and evolutionary stage. The results show that the envelope of variation is much wider than the one traditionally acknowledged in current grammars of English, and that type of meaning, lexical verb or text type are crucial determiners in the choice of particular forms to express perfect meaning. By contrast, mode or evolutionary stage does not seem to have a bearing on the differences between varieties.
@article{suarez-gomez_coding_2019,
	title = {The coding of perfect meaning in {African}, {Asian} and {Caribbean} {Englishes}},
	volume = {23},
	issn = {1360-6743, 1469-4379},
	url = {https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/english-language-and-linguistics/article/coding-of-perfect-meaning-in-african-asian-and-caribbean-englishes/F4164161A7A13B9007448E1A33C9BFFA},
	doi = {10.1017/S1360674317000508},
	abstract = {The perfect in World Englishes has attracted much attention recently, especially from a semasiological perspective, in which the analytic have + participle is analysed in comparison with the synthetic preterite. This article intends to achieve a more holistic picture of the expression of perfect meaning in World Englishes, which allows us to identify how perfect meaning is expressed in all pragmatic contexts. In this study, all the occurrences of ten high-frequency verbs are examined in order to single out those expressing perfect meaning. The corpus (8.8m words in total) includes ten components of the International Corpus of English: eight Outer Circle varieties from Africa, Asia and the Caribbean, and two reference varieties: British and American English. The relevant examples are tabulated across variables such as presence of adverbials, type of perfect meaning, lexical verb, mode, text type and evolutionary stage. The results show that the envelope of variation is much wider than the one traditionally acknowledged in current grammars of English, and that type of meaning, lexical verb or text type are crucial determiners in the choice of particular forms to express perfect meaning. By contrast, mode or evolutionary stage does not seem to have a bearing on the differences between varieties.},
	language = {en},
	number = {3},
	urldate = {2020-05-25},
	journal = {English Language \& Linguistics},
	author = {Suárez-Gómez, Cristina},
	month = sep,
	year = {2019},
	pages = {509--529},
}

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