Chapter III, Part 2    

III.B.2 Inner Processes

29. The Inner Processes differ substantially in their Lexicogrammar from the Outer Processes. As we shall see, some are paired between greater Intention or Control, e.g., ‘looking’ or ‘finding out’, versus lesser, e.g., ‘seeing’ or ‘thinking’.

30. Perceptions are sensory Actions whose Prototype Clause Core has ‘Perceiver’ as Subject, ‘Perception’ as Verb Phrase, and ‘Perceived’ as Object. The key functions are to represent the proverbial ‘five senses’, though the Lexico-grammar accords them unequal frequencies. ‘Sight’ ranks the highest, and ‘hearing’ rather lower, and the other three quite low. For a rough test, the basic Verb forms in the BNC are: ‘see’ at 115,100, ‘hear’ are 13,079, ‘touch’ at 2431, ‘smell’ at 1108, and ‘taste’ at 672. However, part of the differences is due to expanded meanings, like ‘see’ for  ‘understand’.

31. When Intention or Control do not apply, the Prototypes for sight and hearing are of course the basic ‘seeing’ and ‘hearing’ [355-56]; and where those factors do apply, the Prototypes could be ‘watching’ and ‘listening to’ [357-58].

[355] Turning, he saw a barn owl, flying parallel to him (Forest of the Night)

[356] He heard a man’s gruff voice and a loud slap, followed by lilting laughter. (Frankie)

[357] I watched London nightlife pass by. I watched the party-goers, the punks, the pimps, the prostitutes, the princely and the poor. (Furniture)

[358] We listened to the swish as the salvoes passed overhead. (Invasion)

Negatives with First Person or Second Person Pronouns as the Subject can signify that some Process is not ‘seen’ or ‘heard’ just because it is improbable [359-62].

[359] He’s a nice boy, but somehow I don’t see him making it to the top. (City of Gold)

[360] the music deserves to be heard, and I don’t hear anybody else doing it (Guitarist)

[361] You don’t see cyclists wearing those doctor’s masks. There are no more warnings, on polleny days, for asthmatics and hay-fever sufferers. (Time’s Arrow)

[362] you don’t hear bus companies threatening to stop those services. (Northern Echo)

32. Another well-attested Prototype for the sense of sight implying less Intention and Control than ‘watching’ but more than ‘seeing’ is ‘looking at’ [363]. ‘Looking’ tends more than those two Verbs to convey a further Intention, such as Cognition [364] or Emotion [365]; or to assume expanded meanings like ‘consider’ [366] or ‘inspect’ [367]. The same Verb has a Subject as Developer in Developments like ‘looking ill’ [368] or ‘looking older’ [369]; or a Subject in the function of a perceived Affected of some Dispositive [370-71]. The Colligation ‘look like’ carries mainly Pejorative Attitudes, as in [372-73].

[363] she looked around at the men on offer, braying nightclub fools mostly. (Stone Cold)

[364] She looked at him earnestly, wanting to re-establish understanding. (First of Midnight)

[365] They looked at each other quizzically, trying to decide how much emotion the other was prepared to invest (Three Times Table)

[366] The clubs looked at the situation and felt it was time to change. (Clive Rowlands)BNC 

[367] the operations director says he’ll look into the air-conditioning problem (Profitboss)

[368] In spite of Corfu he looked very ill to-day (Portrait)

[369] She looked a good deal older, but her eye was as bright as ever (Portrait)

[370] He was immediately ashamed of the outburst. She looked stricken (Rich Pass)

[371] She looked defeated, quite unlike her normal self (Traffic)

[372] Brummie men look like lopsided oafs, gnomes, hobgoblins. (Birmingham Magazine)

[373] Kevin Coley looked like a pig with a thatched, blond tea cosy on its head. […] His wife […] in her spotted dress looked like a Sherman tank with measles (Polo)

33. For the sense of hearing, the Medial similar to ‘looking’ is ‘sounding’, e.g. [374-75]. ‘Sounding like’ is popular, also mainly Pejorative, e.g. [376-77].

[374] The policewoman sounded very wretched, almost distraught (Best Man)

[375] ‘Really?’ Karl sounded intrigued. ‘Hans, you sound exhilarated’. (Bury the Dead).

[376]  the jerky bumbling words sounded like the raving of a madwoman. (Best Man)

[377] The wind […] sounded like a squadron of Concordes, absolutely blood-curdling. (Today)

34. Dispositive or Ergative Perceptives occur for sight and hearing. The common meaning is like ‘cause’ or ‘compel’ for ‘watch’ [378] and ‘listen’ [379]; ‘enable’ for ‘see’ [380] and ‘hear’ [381]; and ‘lend an appearance’ for ‘look’ [382].

[378] Take the food away from him, tie him up and make him watch us eat (Circus Boys)

[379] She had listened to several parties, but had made them listen in return (Portrait)

[380] Thomas first made her see the city in all its architectural wonder. (Memory and Desire)

[381] we can make ourselves hear music in white noise (Mysteries of Science)

[382] The mask made me look terrifying and professional like a commando. (Not Company)

35. The other senses for Perceptions, as indicated by the BNC frequencies in III.30, are far less favoured, and less prone to assume expanded meanings. The Prototype ‘touching’ in its basic usage is mostly Active with a Human Agent or a human body part as Subject [383-84]; non-Humans figure in the Active’ [385]; or the Medial [386]. Negatives can mean complete remoteness from something [387]. The Passive is mostly for making someone feel a kindly Emotion [388].

[383] Susan touched the man’s shoulder. The fabric of his jerkin was rough (Nudists)

[384] His fingers touched hers and his heart gave a jolt (Latchkey Kid)

[385] As the boat touched the far bank, the leopardess stepped ashore (Kingdoms East)

[386] Suddenly, catastrophe struck. The plane touched down, bounced up again, slewed sideways and skidded along the runway, breaking up as it did so (Ayrshire Heritage)

[387] Everyone in her orbit knew she never touched alcohol. (The Prince)

[388] I had been touched by his kindness to my aunts (Woman of My Age)

The Dispositive or Ergative of ‘making touch’ can narrow [389] or expand [390]:

[389] A Japanese policeman claims the devil made him touch a woman (Ananova)www 

[390] Failure made Jackie touch rock bottom (IndiaInfo)www

36. The Prototype of ‘smelling’ is more inclined than ‘seeing’, ‘hearing’, or ‘touching’ to imply an Attitude. Like ‘looking’, it occurs in Active with Perceiver as Subject [391-92], or Medial with Perceived as Subject [393-94], and with either Ameliorative or Pejorative Attitude; Passives like [395-96] are not frequent. Pejorative dominates the unaccompanied Medial [397-98], and the Medial Colligations ‘smell like’ [399] and ‘smell of’ [400].

[391] She smelled the clean tang of his breath (Finishing Touch)

[392] I smelled sweat and the drink on his breath. (Freely Sing)

[393] The chestnuts smell real good — all hot and nutty. (Bayswater)

[394] The hallway smelled beery and unclean. (Dark Dance)

[395] the sweet aroma of barbecue was smelled for miles (Houston Livestock Rodeo)www

[396] It was 7-8 ft tall with a broad back. A rancid stench was smelled (Bigfoot Sightings)www

[397] Paulette put his foot on her lap, tugged off the boot. […] ‘God, you smell!’ (Sharpe)

[398] You always find some good in people. I can’t stand them. They smell. (Sweet Dreams)

[399] His damp swimming costume […] smells like the bottom of a restaurant slop bin. (Lucker)

[400] The air smelled of rotten straw, damp, and an overpowering stench (My Enemy)

The Dispositive or Ergative of ‘making smell’ is for the Medial:

[401] some brands of diesel now have additives to make them smell sweeter. (Daily Telegraph)

[402] Fags make you smell like ash-trays, play havoc with yer tongues. (miscellanea)BNC

The expanded meanings of ‘smelling’ as having a ‘hunch’ or ‘presentiment’ turn out Pejorative [403-04]; disapproval is implied even when the Perceived by itself might seem Ameliorative, like ‘advantage’ [405] or ‘profits’ [406].

[403] I smell a con […] as surely as I smell a knocked off car, a crooked log book. (Be an Actor)

[404] ‘Keep your head down, Laz’, he advised. ‘I smell big trouble.’ (Suburban Dead)

[405] It just shows you how pushy the educated classes can be when they smell an advantage (Awfully Big Adventure)

[406] Thomas smelled a bigger profit from the up-and-coming developers (Cry Alone)

37. The Prototype ‘tasting’ has a Lexicogrammar similar to ‘smelling’ in offering both Active [407-08] versus Medial [409-10], yet (rarely) Passive too [411]. However, Attitudes favour Ameliorative, as if eating is more pleasurable than sniffing, even for a ‘cold meal’ [412] or ‘egg and chips’ [413]. Still, the Colligations ‘taste like’ and ‘taste of’ are usually Pejorative in the data [414-15].

[407] He tasted all the bread in the sandwiches and approved the menu. (Belfast Telegraph)

[408] Corbett tasted the thick heady ale, pronounced himself satisfied (Prince of Darkness)

[409] His tea tasted excellent, and there was nobody to disturb him. (Ghost Stories)

[410] The tea tasted horrible but at least it gave me the chance to think. (Furniture)

[411] Each parcel of butter is tasted with a long scoop (Omelette)

[412] Although the meal was a cold one, it tasted delicious. (French Encounter)

[413] The egg and chips tasted wonderful, everything was great. (Vets Might Fly)

[414] The cigarette tasted like engine grease filtered through sawdust. (Forestalled)

[415] Nopps’ apricot brandy tasted of petrol, mixed with creosote and hair oil. (Not Company)

In expanded meanings, ‘tasting’ is undergoing an Event [572] or an Emotion [573].

[416] No visiting country has tasted victory in a competitive match in Dublin during Jack Charlton’s remarkable tenure as Republic of Ireland manager. (Belfast Telegraph)

[417] Hogan told me you had…tasted the joys of connubial bliss. (Dubliners)

The Dispositive or Ergative of ‘making taste’ is mainly Medial [418], but I found some Actives too like [419].

[418] We have dozens of ways of making lobsters taste different. (Other Side)

[419] Poison, however, is a different matter. That’s why I make my chaplain taste what I eat and drink. (Poisoned Chalice)

38. Commands for Perceptions naturally prefer Verbs with Intention and Control. I find ‘watch’ and ‘listen’ as genuine Perceptions in Affirmative and Negative [420-23], but also in expanded meanings: ‘watch’ for ‘be warned about’ [424], and ‘listen to’ as ‘be convinced by’ [425]. For the frequent ‘looking’, I find actual vision [426-27], plus the expanded meanings of ‘considering’ in the Active [428] or ‘appearing’ in the Medial for Emotions [429]. I find ‘see’ and ‘hear’ as genuine Perceptions only rarely, and nearly always Affirmative [430-31]; and occurring in Commands for other Processes, such the Dispositive the Ergatives of ‘seeing’ that some Action gets done [432] or ‘seeing to it’ that it gets done [433].

[420] Watch your fish carefully at feeding times (Fishkeeping)

[421] When walking, look up; fix eyes on a distant spot; do not watch your feet. (Hearing Loss)

[422] Listen to the wind among the pines! Yours is a glorious country. (Room With a View)

[423] I’m raving, I know; don’t listen, Mary; go on with your work. (Night and Day)

[424] ‘Oh, you daft loony, you call yourself a sergeant?’ ‘Watch your mouth, Private No-body.’ (Sergeant Joe)

[425] ‘General Clinton’, I cried, ‘do not listen to his lies.’ (Ballantrae)

[426] Just look what a mess you’re making — I’ve got to clean that up. (Dandelion Days)

[427] ‘Don’t look out of the window, little boy’, he shouted. ‘Look at the book.’ (Love of a King)

[428] Look at all the money in the country if we only worked the old industries (Dubliners)

[429] Look happy — other people are waiting to be friendly. (Hearing Loss)

[430] Isn’t he perfectly beautiful? Just see the dimples in his elbows. (House of Dreams)

[431] I will not be interrupted. Hear me in silence. (Pride)

[432] See that execution be done without fail on Master Ridley (Gladstone)

[433] Please see to it that Miss Asshe receives my note. (Dark Star Passing)

The other three senses have comparatively few Commands, and mostly in their straightforward meanings and in the Affirmative:

[434] Touch the hand of a gentleman! (Little Dorrit)

[435] Touch me at your peril! or I will forget you are my mother’s son. (Sybil)

[436] Smell my hot goathide. (Ulysses)

[467] Look at the water. Smell it! That’s wot we drinks. (Bleak House)

[438] ‘Taste the wine again, Jane.’ I obeyed him. (Eyre)

[439] We call it ‘Tres de Mayo’ coffee. Taste it. (Nostromo)

39. For Perceptions, Denials of Intention like [440-45] are rare in my data. Denials of Control are more common [446-50]

[440] I didn’t mean to see this band, but I couldn’t help but notice all the people on stage and their wacky outfits. (Nub Records)www

[441] I didn’t mean to watch it, but we ended up in front of a TV (Jim Bassett)www

[442] If he gets upset because he thinks that you were listening in to his private conversa-tion, tell him that you didn’t mean to hear it (Ask Margo)www

[443] I didn’t mean to listen, but they’re so loud. (Wu Fei Duo)www

[444] She didn’t mean to sound brusque. Perhaps he just made her nervous. (Season for Murder)

[445] I didn’t mean to touch you! It was an accident, I swear. (Twisted Candy)www

[446] You made sure you draped yourself where I couldn’t help seeing you. (Two Can Share)

[447] He slept in a room opposite, with his door ajar. He couldn’t help hearing the row. (No Enemy)

[448] The bed was so narrow they couldn’t help touching at the shoulders (WaxWorks)www

[449] I couldn’t help smelling the sweet smell from the apples. (Xiaochun)www

[450] The hungry guests couldn’t help tasting the masterpieces (Russian Journal)www

40. The most incontestably Inner Process is Cognition, whose Prototype Clause Core has the ‘Cogniser’ as Subject, ‘Cognition’ as Verb Phrase, and ‘Cognised’ as Object. Like the Perceptions of sight and hearing, the Verbs divide according to Intention or Control. Without them, the Prototype would be ‘knowing’ as ‘having knowledge’ [451-52] or ‘being acquainted with [453-54]. With them as ‘obtaining knowledge’, the Prototypes would be ‘learning’ [455-56] or ‘finding out’ [457-58]. The choice between Affirmative and Negative is fairly open.

[451] Gardeners know the value of a really sharp knife for pruning. (Gardeners World)

[452] The villages do not know the cause of this illness. (Developing World)

[453] Everybody in Meadow Brook knew the Bobbseys. (Bobbsey)

[454] I did not know the uncle well, but he knew my husband (Mother without a Mask)

[455] James Kilpatrick learned the skills of breeding horses (Ayrshire Heritage)BNC

[456] In prison, if you do not learn stealth, you die. (City of Dreams)

[457] After one fall too many, he went to the doctor and found out the truth. (Daily Mirror)

[458] the system analyst has not found out the user requirements. (Information Systems)

More general or superficial Cognition uses Colligations with ‘about’ [459-60] or ‘of’ [461-62], meaning roughly ‘be/become informed about’ or ‘aware of’.

[459] In Darwin’s lifetime, physicists did not know about radioactivity (Problems of Biology)

[460] They learned about selling, pricing, negotiating, licensing (Atomic Energy Authority)

[461] FAMILY knew of whole streets where women went out to work and men stayed at home and neglected the children. (Women and Social Policy)

[462] Pupils do not learn of the social and political implications of scientific discoveries. (Gender and Subject)

41. The Prototypes ‘think about’ [463] and ‘think of’ [464] imply more Control than ‘knowing’ but less than ‘finding out’. These can mean ‘contemplate’ [465], but also ‘have an opinion of’, usually Pejorative [466]. Colligations with ‘all’ [467] or ‘nothing but’ [468] can suggest exclusive or obsessive thinking. ‘Think of’ also occurs in expanded meanings for ‘have an idea’ [469] or ‘show consideration for’ [470]; when the Subject is the Impersonal Pronoun ‘one’, the Objects are Things or Humans coming readily to mind for a Topic [471].

[463] He thinks about football rigorously (Sunday People)

[464] In the midst of his own sorrow and pain and torment, he thinks of this dying thief (sermon)BNC

[465] You know what the Church thinks about marriage and divorce. Divorce is wrong in the eyes of God! (Love of a King)

[466] he’s just a parasitical, sexually frustrated man. That’s what I think of him (Suburbia)

[467] Take Frau Grossman, all she thinks about is finery and food. (Lying Together)

[468] Thought about nothing but cars for the first twenty-five years of his life, now he thinks about nothing but polo. (Polo)

[469 Then the gaffer thinks of a tactical plan for Elland Road (Today)

[470] A Brownie thinks of others before herself and does a good turn every day (Brownie Stories)

[471] Other tyrants have astutely combined populism and magic: one thinks of Papa Doc and Idi Amin. (Independent)

42. The Transitivity of Cognitive Processes is peculiar. ‘Knowing’ in Actives like [451-54], and in Passives with the Cogniser having ‘by’ [472] or ‘to’ [473] hardly seems to constitute an Action like ‘doing to’ or ‘being done to’. Also, uses without the Cognised can have a Medial flavour like Enactives [474-75].

[472] Mr Lear was known by everyone as ‘a lovely person and a gentleman at all times’. (Northern Echo)

[473] This document was known to Naval Intelligence and to the FBI. (FlyPast)

[474] ‘So what’s changed?’ Deep down he knew. (Sharp End)

[475] All these constituents needed fusing and moulding into a unity in his mind. He thought and meditated; (Ramsey)

43. ‘Knowing’, ‘learning’, and ‘finding out’ followed by a Dependent Clause imply that the Clause expresses what somebody holds to be the truth [476-78]; ‘thinking’ certainly does not [479], especially in the Colligation ‘I thought’ to indicate ‘it was supposed to be settled, but I see now it isn’t’ [480].

[476] I know that you killed two people. I know that you’re in love with someone (Conjure Me)

[477] I learned that a geriatric cowboy had become President of the mightiest nation  on earth (Redundancy of Courage)

[478] I found out that I came a poor second to the real love of her life money. (Bay of Rainbows)

[479] I’ve done my best. I thought that was what I was being paid for. It seems I was wrong.

    (creative writing)BNC

[480] ‘Have you seen Antoinette?’ ‘I thought I told you I gave her the boot.’ (Collector)

44. I find Dispositive or Ergative Cognitions for ‘making know’ [481], ‘making learn’ [482], and, most of all, ‘making think’ [483-84].

[481] By his youth […] he made me know that I was growing old (Green Branch)

[482] When I was eighteen my father made me learn cards. (Nottingham Oral History)BNC

[483] Her undeniable sincerity appeared to make Mike think. (Driven by Love)

[484] The computer has been taught fishing tricks: it jiggles the line to make the squid think the bait is alive. (New Scientist)

45. Commands for Cognitions are highly selective. I found very few for ‘know’, only Affirmative, and mostly in strenuous style [485]. Affirmative Commands for ‘learn’ and ‘find out’ are mainly found in discourses offering advice or services, and, like ‘become’ in III.28, imply confidence in achieving the result [486-87]; Negatives like [488-89] are rare indeed. In expanded meanings, ‘just think’ by itself [490] and ‘think of it’ [491] are for ‘imagine something impressive’; ‘think about’ is for ‘consider’ [492]; and ‘think of’ is for ‘be considerate of’ [493]. ‘Don’t think about’ can be a forceful warning not to do something [494]. Commands of Cognitives with a Dependent Clause are not common and again seem to me strenuous style [495-97], except for ‘don’t think’ [498].

[485] Know the temptation ere you judge the crime! (Mary Barton)

[486] Learn To Fly at Trade Winds Aviation Flight Training Center (Directory of Flight)www

[487] Come to Harrods and find out the colours and fashions to suit your individual style. (Harpers & Queen)

[488] Don’t Learn Safety By Accident! (Safety Posters)www

[489] Do not learn your lines, as this can make the talk rather stilted (People in Organsations)

[490] Just think, we’ll have practically a whole day together (Phoney War)

[491] Think of it: a little over £20-a-week per member of the family. (Guardian)

[492] ‘Think about marrying me.’ ‘You are crazy!’ (Sons of Heaven)

[493] Don’t be so selfish, Andrew. Think of poor Magnus. (English Crime)

[494] And don’t even think about trying to double-cross me. (Assassins)

[495] Know that our griefs are risen to the top, and overflow their banks. (Pericles)

[496] Learn that I am supplanted in heaven. (Golden Age of Myth)

[497] Look upon my grave. Think that I might have been as honest and as happy as you! (Dombey)

[498] Don’t think for a second that you can breeze through this game (Zzap 64!)

46. Denial of Intention like [499-500] are rare indeed, Denials of Control like [501] are uncommon too, except for ‘think’ [502].

[499] She wouldn’t be asking something personal if she didn’t mean to know. (Danielle)www

[500] While I was looking for this picture for you guys, I accidentally learned stuff that I didn’t mean to learn. (Oakiefanoakie)www

[501] As a diplomat in countries so high on Washington’s national security agenda, Walker couldn’t help knowing something about spying. (LA Times)

[502] As he waited, he couldn’t help thinking about that first night. (Rain)

47. Aspirations are Inner Actions whose Prototype Clause Core in the Active has ‘Aspirer’ as Subject, an ‘Aspiration’ as Verb Phrase, and the ‘Aspired’ either as Object or else as Infinitive for another Process; in the Passive the Aspired is Subject and the Aspirer is an Agentive Adverbial. The leading Prototype would be ‘wanting’, which is enormously frequent in current usage, e.g. [503-06].

[503] David Mellor wanted a fancy shell-shaped sink in ‘Whisper’ pink (Daily Mirror)

[504] I desperately wanted to go on the circuit I find the life terrifically exciting. (Clare Wood in the Guardian)

[505] The Dallas Cowboys running back is wanted by the Minnesota Vikings (Independent) 

[506] the one van was wanted to go to Wicken on a Saturday again. (Suffolk Archive)BNC

Also frequent are the Ergatives of ‘wanting’ someone else to do something, with an Infinitive in the Active [507] or the Medial [508]; or something to get done to someone else, with Infinitive in the Passive [509].

[507] The old scoundrel wanted Mary to burn one of the wills (Middlemarch)

[508] Ardent for liberty, he wanted the bishops to behave fiercely (Ramsey)

[509] the prosperous merchants and bankers, whose taxes paid for the police, wanted the traffic kept moving, burglars put behind bars, footpads eliminated. (Patently Murder)

48. The Prototype ‘wishing’ is less frequent and adaptable. The Active with a Direct Object is strenuous style [510], except with an Indirect Object too [511]. Far more often, you ‘wish for’ something’ [512]; or ‘wish to do’ something [513].

[510] he wished his thriving, yea, and in a lesser way, he wished the same to Roger (Well)

[511] Elizabeth wished her all imaginable happiness. (Pride)

[512] When persecution died down, many wished for restoration (History of Christianity)

[513] She wished frantically to go faster, and the broomstick sped away (Brownie Stories)

Some potential Dispositive or Ergative Colligations are compressed, e.g., wishing somebody dead [514] or yourself somewhere else [515]. The preferred Colligations are ‘wishing’ someone to do something [516], or something to get done [517], or again ‘wishing that’ something would happen [518] cf. xxx). 

[514] All the same, that night Gaily had wished her dead. (Gentleman and Ladies)

[515] Ruth heartily wished herself back in New York. She was bored at Millfield. (Appleby)

[516] Mrs Mantini wished her to dust the furniture, burnish the coal scuttle, and clean the windows. (Dark Dance)

[517] If you wish interest to be paid to another account, advise your branch (Midland Bank)BNC

[518] he wished that Elaine would open her eyes, but she was blind drunk (Ladykiller)

Vigorous praise or enthusiasm can be expressed with the Colligations ‘couldn’t wish for’ + Comparative [519]; or ‘Superlative + ‘could wish for’ [520]; or with ‘every’ [521] or ‘all’ [522].

[519] We couldn’t have wished for better weather — perfect sunshine (Wedding Speeches)

[520] You’re the most marvellous lover anyone could wish for. (Sudden Death)

[521] Gibraltar Point contains almost every type of habitat a discerning bird could wish for. (Birdwatcher)

[522] Emma was given all the consequence she could wish for (Emma)

49. The Prototype ‘hoping’ has a Lexicogrammar like ‘wishing’ but the Inten-tion and Control are weaker, Colligating with ‘for’ used plus a Direct Object [523], or ‘to’ plus Infinitive for another Process with the same Agent [524-25]. The Progressive turned up rather frequently [523, 525]

[523] Mozart was hoping for another court appointment under the new emperor (Mozart)

[524] Lakatos hoped to give rules for eliminating research programmes (Thing Called Science)

[525] New York City Ballet was hoping to have its first London season (Cranko)

Because ‘hoping’ is weaker, the parallel Colligations for praise and enthusiasm tend to come out fainter [526-27].

[526] A 1-1 draw was the best they could have hoped for from this match. (TV news)

[527] There you have it. Not a pretty death, but as peaceful as she could have hoped for, given the circumstances. (My Idea of Fun)

The ‘draw’ and the ‘death’ weren’t welcomed, but were all you could have expected.

50. The Prototype ‘needing’ is a more peculiar Aspiration. It can be close to ‘wanting’ with the Aspirer or ‘Needer’ as Subject, plus an Object [528] or an Infinitive [529] as the Needed. But often the ‘need’ is merely assessed by the speaker or writer; the Subject is not an Aspirer [530], and indeed might deny the need [531], such as bodily punishment [532]. The latter usage occasionally occurs with ‘want’ as well, despite the paradox [533-34]; I find no such uses of ‘wish’ or ‘hope’.

[528] I need you, darling, both physically and spiritually (Enigma)

[529] She needed to be the centre of attention and her clothes showed it. (Jane’s Journey)

[530] the Government needs to give a higher priority to the quality of life (Independent)

[531] My God, the world needs criticizing today…criticizing to death. (Chatterly)

[532] An occasional child needs a whipping and would be improved by it. (Avonlea)

[533] he’s a naughty boy and he wants a smacking (conversation)BNC

[534] The capricious creature probably wanted a whipping to bring her to the understand-ing of the principle called mastery, which is in man. (Egoist)

‘Needing’ and ‘wanting’ are also parallel in colligating with a Participle [535-536].

[535] the skirt, however, needed hooking at various angles (Voyage Out)

[536] Harriet only wanted drawing out, and receiving a few, very few hints. (Emma)

51. Like Cognition, Aspiration has a peculiar Transitivity, unlike Actions of ‘doing to’; or ‘being done to’ (cf. III.17). Passives do appear for ‘wanting’ [505-06] (III.47), but rarely for ‘wishing’ [537-38]. Passives for ‘hoping’ are in my data with ‘it’ as Subject, and mostly in official or bureaucratic discourse [539]; mentioning the Aspirer is rare [540]. Passives for ‘needing’ are the most frequent [541], colligating with Prepositional Phrases of ‘for’ [542] and Infinitives of ‘to’ [543].

[537] The Longbourn party […] had to wait for their carriages, which gave them time to see how heartily they were wished away (Pride)

[538] my daughter was once was wished Happy Birthday (conversation)BNC

[539] In Bonn it is hoped that there can be orderly change across the border (Independent)

[540] The island itself — its people and their occupations, its geology, fauna and flora, its architecture — would, it was hoped by the parents, widen horizons (Tomorrow)

[541] Diaghilev was convinced that another truly Russian ballet was needed (Ballet-Maker)

[542] Tenors are needed for Northwich and District Festival Choir (Liverpool Echo)

[543] Care and skill are needed to handle cask beer when it reaches the pub. (CAMRA)

52. Dispositive or Ergative Aspirations are common for ‘making want’ [544], less so for ‘making wish’ [545], and least for ‘making hope’ [546] and ‘making need’ [547].

[544] The horrors of war made them want to prevent conflict. (High Places)

[545] The mockery made her wish she’d said nothing. (Gemini Girl)

[546] I sat thinking of Rima with just a tinge of bitterness in my thoughts which made me hope that she would miss me as much as I missed her (Green Mansions)  

[547] But misgiving had made her need me more than I needed her. (Letters in the Dark)

53. Commands are implausible for these Prototype Aspirations. I found none for ‘want’, though I might invent some in a suitable Mills & Boon style [548-549] (cf. xxx). I did find ‘wish’ and ‘hope’ [550-553], but less often than I would have guessed. Samples for ‘need’ I would again have to invent [554].

[548] *’Please, darling, want me!’ she hoarsed fiercely into his heaving sternum.

[549] *’Don’t want what you can’t have’, he mirthed, with his soul-snaring sneer.

[550] ‘There is no dishonour in wishing I had here some two scores of my gallant troop’. […] ‘Wish for whom thou wilt’ (Ivanhoe)

[551] That would be the greatest misfortune of all! To find a man agreeable whom one is determined to hate! Do not wish me such an evil. (Pride)

[552] It’s gonna be bloody Christmas before we know where we are. Hang your stocking up, hope for the best. (conversation)BNC

[553] ‘The way you’ve listened gives me some hope.’ ‘Don’t hope too much’. (Portrait)

[554] * 'Oh Ludovico, need me like I need you’, she concupissed, her nipples pointing ballistically at his.

54. Denials of Intention are mighty scarce [555-558]. Denial of Control is a bit more plausible for ‘want’, ‘wish’, or ‘hope’ [560-561]; but not for ‘need’ [562].

[555] Damn it, I didn’t mean to want you. Love’s an addiction (Heart’s Ease)www

[556] I didn’t mean to wish her away. I — I didn’t know they were the words! (Bigess)www

[557] He didn’t mean to hope anything bad on his mom (Beverly)www

[558] ‘I didn’t mean to need you’. ‘Well, I didn’t expect to need you, either.’ (GH in Review)www 

[559] He couldn’t help wanting the impossible (Crystal Gardens)www

[560] I couldn’t help wishing that a priest would show up (Ateni)www

[561] He couldn’t help hoping for some more personal contact. (Harvard’s Education)www

[562] She didn’t want to know if there was another woman, but she couldn’t help needing to know. (Shadows of Hope)www

 

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