Stretched verb explained

A stretched verb is a complex predicate composed of a light verb and an eventive noun. An example is the English phrase "take a bite out of", which is semantically similar to the simple verb "bite". The concept has been used in studies of German and English.[1]

Other names for a stretched verb include "supported verb", "expanded predicate", "verbo-nominal phrase", and "delexical verb combination". Some definitions may place further restrictions on the construction: restricting the light verb to one of a fixed list; restricting the occurrence of articles, prepositions, or adverbs within the complex phrase; requiring the eventive noun to be identical or cognate with a synonymous simple verb, or at least requiring the stretched verb to be synonymous with some simple verb.[2]

In English, many stretched verbs are more common than a corresponding simple verb: for example "get rid [of X from Y]" compared to the verb "rid [Y of X]"; or "offer (one's) condolences [to X]" vs "condole [with X]". Correct use of stretched verbs is about as difficult for EFL students as other types of collocation.[3]

See also

References

  1. Book: Allerton, D. J. . Stretched Verb Constructions in English . 2002 . . 0-415-25733-6 .
  2. Book: Nesselhauf, Nadja . Collocations in a Learner Corpus . 2005 . John Benjamins . 90-272-2285-1 . §2.1.2, pp.19–21 .
  3. Nesselhauf, §5.1.3, pp.211–214