Open Access
Tense in Temporal Adjunct Clauses
Author(s) -
Ana Arregui,
Kiyomi Kusumoto
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
proceedings from semantics and linguistic theory
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2163-5951
pISSN - 2163-5943
DOI - 10.3765/salt.v0i0.2814
Subject(s) - adjunct , dependent clause , interpretation (philosophy) , past tense , complement (music) , sequence (biology) , present tense , linguistics , computer science , natural language processing , philosophy , verb , sentence , biochemistry , chemistry , genetics , complementation , biology , gene , phenotype
The behaviour of tense in subordinate clauses is not uniform across languages and theories that deal with the interpretation of tense try to explain this. The interpretation of past and present tense in complement clauses is one of the well known puzzles. Languages differ on this respect, and have been classified accordingly as sequence of tense languages (e.g. English) and non-sequence of tense languages (e.g. Japanese). In this paper we will be concerned mainly with the interpretation of tenses in temporal adjunct clauses (TACs). We will discuss the analysis proposed by Ogihara [1994, 1996] and argue that the differences in tense distribution that we observe between English and Japanese TACs are not to be explained as a case of sequence of tense.