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Review paper

FREQUENCY OF PARTICIPIAL MODIFIER CLAUSES IN A SELECTION OF TEXTS IN THE MAGAZINE GENRE

By
Edina Rizvić-Eminović ,
Edina Rizvić-Eminović
Adnan Bujak ,
Adnan Bujak
Goran Grubešić
Goran Grubešić
Editor: Enes Prasko

Abstract

The  paper  explores  the  frequency  of  participial  modifier  clauses  in  a  selection  of  texts  in  the magazine genre. Non-finite clauses containing the main verb in the participle form, called –ing and –ed forms,  are  not  uncommon  in  written  English.  This  paper  aims  to  determine  the  frequency  of  such participial  clauses  when  they  have  a  modifier  function,  namely  serving  as  adverbials  to  verbs  or  as sentence adverbials, or as modifiers within noun phrases, in a selection of texts in the magazine genre. It 
was hypothesised that participial clauses would have a significant presence in this genre, especially the –ing clauses, and that their predominant function would be adnominal. The corpus under consideration has provided evidence of significant presence of participial modifier clauses in this genre and supported the initial assumption of prevalence of –ing clauses, and their adnominal function. 

Citation

This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. 

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