Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
M. Halliday (1976)
Language as social semiotic: The social interpretation of language and meaning
Ignacio Galve (1998)
The textual interplay of grammatical metaphor on the nominalizations occurring in written medical EnglishJournal of Pragmatics, 30
Teresa Fanego (2004)
On reanalysis and actualization in syntactic change: The rise and development of English verbal gerundsDiachronica, 21
M. Charles (2003)
‘This mystery…’: a corpus-based study of the use of nouns to construct stance in theses from two contrasting disciplinesJournal of English for Academic Purposes, 2
M. Halliday (1999)
Language and Knowledge: The ‘Unpacking’ of Text
J. Sowa (2006)
Book Reviews: Construing Experience through Meaning: A Language-based Approach to Cognition
Qingshun He, Bingjun Yang (2015)
Absolute Clauses in English from the Systemic Functional Perspective
Liu Cheng-yu (2003)
The Stylistic Value of Grammatical MetaphorModern foreign languages
Qingshun He, Bingjun Yang, Binli Wen (2015)
Textual Metaphor from the Perspective of RelatorAustralian Journal of Linguistics, 35
M. Halliday (1985)
An Introduction to Functional Grammar
Matsuji Tajima (1996)
The Common-/Objective-Case Subject of the Gerund in Middle EnglishNOWELE. North-Western European Language Evolution
M. Taverniers (2008)
Interpersonal grammatical metaphor as double scoping and double groundingWord, 59
David Banks (2003)
The evolution of grammatical metaphor in scientific writing
M. Halliday, J. Martin (2003)
Life as a Noun: Arresting the Universe in Science and Humanities
Teresa Fanego (1996)
The Development of Gerunds as Objects of Subject-Control Verbs in English (1400-1760)Diachronica, 13
Louise Ravelli (2003)
Renewal of connection: Intergrating theory and practice in an understanding of grammatical metaphor
Morton Donner (1986)
The gerund in middle EnglishEnglish Studies, 67
Qingshun He, Bingjun Yang (2017)
A corpus-based study of the correlation between text technicality and ideational metaphor in EnglishLingua, 203
A. Goatly (1997)
The language of metaphors
Junhui Wu, Kun Yang (2017)
Absolute Clauses in English from the Systemic Functional Perspective: A Corpus-Based StudyAustralian Journal of Linguistics, 37
G. Thompson (1996)
Introducing Functional Grammar
Liesbet Heyvaert (2008)
On the constructional semantics of gerundive nominalizations, 42
D. Biber (2006)
University Language: A corpus-based study of spoken and written registers
Qingshun He, Bingjun Yang (2015)
A Corpus-based Approach to the Genre and Diachronic Distributions of English Absolute ClausesJournal of Quantitative Linguistics, 22
George Jack (1988)
The Origins of the English GerundNOWELE. North-Western European Language Evolution, 12
A. Houston (1989)
The English gerund: Syntactic change and discourse function
Qingshun He, Bingjun Yang (2014)
A Study of Transfer Directions in Grammatical Metaphor*Australian Journal of Linguistics, 34
Guangzhou (2013)
Textual Metaphor from the Non-Finite Clausal PerspectiveOpen Journal of Modern Linguistics, 03
D. Biber, R. Quirk (1999)
Longman Grammar of Spoken and Written English
G. Leech, M. Hundt, C. Mair, Nicholas Smith (2009)
Change in Contemporary English: List of tables
Teresa Fanego (1998)
Developments in argument linking in early Modern English gerund phrasesEnglish Language and Linguistics, 2
W. Wurff (1993)
Gerunds and their objects in the Modern English period
David Banks (2005)
On the historical origins of nominalized process in scientific textEnglish for Specific Purposes, 24
David Mitchell (2015)
Type-token models: a comparative studyJournal of Quantitative Linguistics, 22
Jeannett Martin (1992)
English Text: System and structure
R. Quirk, G. Leech, Jan Svartvik (1988)
A __ comprehensive grammar of the English language
H. Smet (2008)
Functional motivations in the development of nominal and verbal gerunds in Middle and Early Modern English1English Language and Linguistics, 12
[The research based on the Crown corpus, the BNC, and the COCA shows that different types of clausal relation have different genre distribution trends. The research based on the COHA shows that different patterns of clause combining have different diachronic distribution trends, and these distribution trends are to a great extent complementary: the decrease of one relation is compensated for by the increase of another relation, and this compensated distribution is consistent with certain historical evolution trend.]
Published: May 18, 2019
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.