Colocaciones con inire como verbo soporte en latín
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Universidad de Salamanca
info
- Jesús de la Villa Polo (coord.)
- Antonio López Fonseca (coord.)
- Emma Falque Rey (coord.)
- María Paz de Hoz García-Bellido (coord.)
- María José Muñoz Jiménez (coord.)
- Irene Villarroel Fernández (coord.)
- Victoria Recio Muñoz (coord.)
Editorial: Guillermo Escolar Editor ; Sociedad Española de Estudios Clásicos
ISBN: 978-84-18981-13-5, 978-84-09-34325-6, 978-84-09-34322-5, 978-84-09-34323-2
Any de publicació: 2021
Volum: 1
Pàgines: 451-460
Congrés: Congreso de la Sociedad Española de Estudios Clásicos (15. 2019. Valladolid)
Tipus: Aportació congrés
Resum
In Classical Latin ineo is not so frequent as ingredior, intro, introeo, incedo, etc. to mean «go into, enter». Instead, because of its abstract meaning, ineo is present in many support verb constructions (inire consilium, conuiuium, gratiam, magistratum, proelium, rationem, etc.), mostly with inchoative aspect. There is only a 5% of free combinations with inire, but almost 12% of lexical collocations and 82% of functional verb constructions. In this paper I conclude that they are not discrete groups, but a continuum: on one extreme the verb has its full semantic content and the noun means a place; on the other one, ineo works as a support verb and the predicative noun determines the meaning and the complements of the whole construction.