Why is it "stare" not "stared"?"I did nothing but stare at them."
This doesn't seem to be a simple case of the past shown by "did" as "did" appears to be the main verb here.
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Why is it "stare" not "stared"?"I did nothing but stare at them."
Well, I guess to me, there isn't really a problem here. I've pointed out that having the two conjoined finites 'did nothing' and (but) 'stared' makes little sense discoursally and/or functionally, whereas viewing it as a lexical phrase makes enough sense generally and (therefore) grammatically too.JuanTwoThree wrote:Fluffy, surely the problem revolves round why it isn't "I did nothing but stared at them".
When I say 'It's a lexical phrase' I don't mean to say that grammatical processes are entirely dead (i.e. not alive and well) within it, not involved in the processes of its construction - that would be silly; what I am saying in a coded and shorthand way is that there isn't much more we can profitably read into the analysis beyond what we can see (WYSIWYG). That is, I simply accept what I see if it seems natural and don't question its validity or what it is telling me about the grammar involved (which is quite different from chucking the item into an "offending" or "totally uninteresting" "performance bin", as Chomsky might, so he can get back to playing with his embedded sentences that are many orders removed from the real complexities of meaning in use i.e. function); and from what I can see, the item under consideration seems fine and pretty much makes sense as it is.JuanTwoThree wrote:Isn't there something more grammaticalised than a lexical phrase happening here? After all it's more productive/generative than many fixed expressions. Look at "What he does is (to) stare at everybody" where in this case the "to" seems to be optional. The various forms mentioned (He did nothing but stare, He didn't do anything but stare, He does nothing but stare, What he does is (to) stare etc) are obviously related but that "to" is a subtle change which smells (to me at least) like....... Grammar!