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- From: djohns@elm.circa.ufl.edu (David A. Johns)
- Newsgroups: alt.usage.english
- Subject: Re: tug/tugging (was: Re: An apology)
- Message-ID: <38072@uflorida.cis.ufl.edu>
- Date: 29 Dec 92 14:26:38 GMT
- References: <92358.194517CLINDSAY@vma.cc.nd.edu> <1992Dec26.044141.1513@Princeton.EDU>
- Sender: news@uflorida.cis.ufl.edu
- Organization: University of Florida, Gainesville
- Lines: 21
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-
- In article <1992Dec26.044141.1513@Princeton.EDU> mikulska@astro.princeton.edu (Margaret Mikulska) writes:
-
- # They helped him (TO) move the car.
- #
- # (Actually, I'm curious which usage is more common and where: "help
- # + bare infinitive" or "help + full infinitive". I certainly hear
- # the variant without "to" most of the time.)
-
- Before I moved to Florida, I heard help to V only from blacks, but
- here it's the dominant form of almost all speakers, especially younger
- ones. As a first approximation, then, I'd guess it's southern US in
- origin.
-
- On the other hand, it's what you might call an expected change, since
- there are only a couple of other verbs that allow V + V and lots that
- require V to V or V Ving. So it would not surprise me to hear that
- help to V had sprung up independently in several places.
-
- David Johns
-
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-