I accept that the book is interesting, but I don't agree about the 'good'.
Well, it does have a few typos, but I find Declerck's coverage of tense and aspect, overall, to be astonishingly brilliant and clear, and I am very sorry to learn that he will not be completing the other volumes projected for the series. I had a brief messaging interaction with Declerck about that roughly ten years ago when I requested a paper of his on something not related to the tenses, and he indicated that, on account of his getting on in years, he would not be able to complete the project.
Declerck has an unfortunate tendency to present opinion as though it is fact. One example: on page 314, he writes:
Compare I have bottled the chutney which is indefinite, and I have been bottling chutney since 9 o' clock, which is continuative. The fomer implicates the direct result 'The chutney is bottled'. The latter is used to refer to such indirect results as 'The house smells of tomato chutney' or 'That's why I am tired', but will not be used to suggest 'The chutney is bottled now'.
The will towards the end is opinion, backed by nothing but Declerck's self-confidence.
I wonder if there's a typo in the example sentence
I have been bottling chutney since 9 o'clock. Given that the other example,
I have bottled the chutney, contains
the before
chutney, one would expect
the to appear
before chutney in the related example. If
the were used there, his point would follow, I think. From the statement
I been bottling the chutney since 9 o'clock, it would be unreasonable to infer that
the chutney (all the chutney; the contextually given quantity of chutney) is now bottled.
Back to page 264 :It's (been) five years since I've seen him. (implies 'I haven't seen him for five years'. The situation is 'repeatable' in the sense that it could have actualized (once or several times in the specified pre-present period.)
The words I have underlined are, once again, unsupported opinion.
So, do you not agree with the point that these present-perfect
since-clauses aspectually suggest potential but unrealized occurrences of the event in the time period they pick out? (Incidentally, it may be worthwhile to observe that extra-grammatical empirical matters are beside the point here. For example, if the speaker has not seen the referent of
him for five years because he [the speaker] has been in prison for those five years, the aspectual suggestiveness of potential but unrealized repetition would still be there, at least for Declerck and me; at best, one could say that it would have been more felicitous, in such a context, for the speaker to use the simple past in the
since-clause:
It has been five years since I [last] saw him.) If so, how would you account for the ungrammaticality of a sentence like (ii) below?
(i) It's been over twenty years since the original World Trade Center building was destroyed.
(ii) *It's been over twenty years since the original World Trade Center building has been destroyed.