get + ?
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get + ?
Here is a sentence from the textbook I use in my teacher training course:
"The activities are designed to get the students using the language."
I have a high-level Korean couple who are planning on opening a private language school in the future, and they are very particular about learning every nuance/rule/situation regarding grammar. Their question regarding this particular example sentence is the -ing form of "use" following the causative "get." They want to know why the sentence doesn't read "The activities are designed to get the students to use the language." My off-the-cuff explanation was that there is an ommitted "to be" (as in "to be using") which emphasises the continuous action of the language use.
They now want to know the name of this grammar point, and where they can find activities in grammar books to practice it. Sigh.
Any suggestions?
"The activities are designed to get the students using the language."
I have a high-level Korean couple who are planning on opening a private language school in the future, and they are very particular about learning every nuance/rule/situation regarding grammar. Their question regarding this particular example sentence is the -ing form of "use" following the causative "get." They want to know why the sentence doesn't read "The activities are designed to get the students to use the language." My off-the-cuff explanation was that there is an ommitted "to be" (as in "to be using") which emphasises the continuous action of the language use.
They now want to know the name of this grammar point, and where they can find activities in grammar books to practice it. Sigh.
Any suggestions?
I can think of many examples, although your examples are a lot less clumsy and a lot more natural than mine. This construction also works with "want": I want you drinking lots of water.
But what do I call it? Causative plus infinitive plus progressive??? or plus gerund??? What key words do I type into Google?
My trouble is that my students have a fairly high understanding of prescriptive grammar, whereas I have a fair-to-middling understanding of descriptive grammar. I can figure out what is happening and why, I can even draw the pretty sentence tree to explain it, but I have no idea what it is called, nor where to send them to practice it.
But what do I call it? Causative plus infinitive plus progressive??? or plus gerund??? What key words do I type into Google?
My trouble is that my students have a fairly high understanding of prescriptive grammar, whereas I have a fair-to-middling understanding of descriptive grammar. I can figure out what is happening and why, I can even draw the pretty sentence tree to explain it, but I have no idea what it is called, nor where to send them to practice it.
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- Location: Spain
"get" +to ...... is "persuade"
"get" + .......ing is "start"
"Can you get the car going?" seems to not involve difficulty, whereas "Can you get the car to go?" does. Does the one with ...ing sit better with things (or people treated as things "get them talking") while the "to......." goes better with people (or anthropomorphically things treated as people eg my car)?
Tell them that it's called "Lucy's causative get" which it may be for all I know.
(Andrew, if you read this, "have them do it later" is a bare infinitive (like let, make, help). Modality sweating from every pore. Did we spot that one?)
"get" + .......ing is "start"
"Can you get the car going?" seems to not involve difficulty, whereas "Can you get the car to go?" does. Does the one with ...ing sit better with things (or people treated as things "get them talking") while the "to......." goes better with people (or anthropomorphically things treated as people eg my car)?
Tell them that it's called "Lucy's causative get" which it may be for all I know.
(Andrew, if you read this, "have them do it later" is a bare infinitive (like let, make, help). Modality sweating from every pore. Did we spot that one?)
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- Posts: 947
- Joined: Tue Sep 14, 2004 11:30 am
- Location: Spain
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- Posts: 947
- Joined: Tue Sep 14, 2004 11:30 am
- Location: Spain
Yes, I can see "I can't get the guest leaving" as "I don't understand the guest leaving" : "get" as in "get a joke".
But it's wandering away from
"I can't get the car going."
"I can't get the car to go."
"I can't get the guest to leave"
"I can't get the guest leaving"
I can see how the last works. It ,makesthe guest sound like a machine, dehumanizing the guest while "get the car to go" humanizes the car:"I can't persuade the car to go".
But it's wandering away from
"I can't get the car going."
"I can't get the car to go."
"I can't get the guest to leave"
"I can't get the guest leaving"
I can see how the last works. It ,makesthe guest sound like a machine, dehumanizing the guest while "get the car to go" humanizes the car:"I can't persuade the car to go".