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This book presents an analysis of how speakers of typologically
diverse languages report present-time situations. It begins from
the assumption that there is a restriction on the use of the
present tense to report present-time dynamic/perfective situations,
while with stative/imperfective situations there are no such
alignment problems. Astrid De Wit brings together cross-linguistic
observations from English, French, the English-based creole
language Sranan, and various Slavic languages, and relates them to
the same phenomenon, the 'present perfective paradox'. The proposed
analysis is founded on the assumption that there is an epistemic
alignment constraint preventing the identification and reporting of
events in their entirety at the time of speaking. This book
discusses the various strategies that the aforementioned languages
have developed to resolve this conceptual difficulty, and
demonstrates that many of the features of their tense-aspect
systems can be regarded as the result of this conflict resolution.
It also offers cognitively plausible explanations for the
conceptual structures underlying the interactions attested between
tense and aspect.
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