Difference between revisions of "Occurrence"
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Latest revision as of 16:59, 18 July 2014
Definition
Occurrence is a type of situation (or state of affairs) which is dynamic, i.e. it is associated with (physical, temporal etc.) change.
The term 'occurrence subsumes activities, accomplishments and achievements and contrasts with states.
Comments
Occurrences, especially activities and accomplishments, normally take the progressive aspect when they are used in the present tense. With activities, the progressive aspect denotes the continuation of an action and with accomplishments it refers to the “preparatory process leading towards the culmination of the event” (Ziegeler 2006: 34).
- I was walking for miles. (activity)
- He was drawing the picture for his mother. (accomplishment)
Nevertheless, they may also be used with the simple aspect in contexts where the momentaneous character of a dynamic situation is highlighted.
- Rooney passes the ball....and Beckham shoots. (live commentary)
- I hereby declare you man and wife. (performative)
- Here comes my mother. (informal commentaries)
See also
REF | This article has no reference(s) or source(s). Please remove this block only when the problem is solved. |