@article{Engelberg2000, author = {Stefan Engelberg}, title = {Verb meaning as event structure}, series = {LACUS Forum : the lexicon}, volume = {26}, editor = {Alan K. Melby and Arle R. Lommel}, url = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:bsz:mh39-10589}, pages = {257 -- 268}, year = {2000}, abstract = {Semantic theories based on predicate-argument structures have always acknowledged that lexical information associated with verbs is the basic source for the rudimentary semantic structure of sentences. The central role of verbs in sentence structure has become a major insight of modern syntactic theories since the lexical turn in linguistics, too. As a result of this development there has been an increasing interest in theories on the lexical representation of verbs. This paper will briefly review prevailing theories on verb semantics (section 1), showing that they can capture only a part of the wide range of syntactic and semantic phenomena dependent on verb meaning. For several of these phenomena (section 2) it will turn out that a theory based on highly structured events is more suitable for representing verb meaning. This theory is based on the idea that verbs refer to events that consist of several subevents which are temporally related, classified according to their duration, and whose event participants are connected to some but not necessarily all subevents by semantic relations (section 3).}, language = {en} }