verbsthrough
Verbsthrough is a term used in linguistics to denote a proposed mechanism whereby information associated with a verb in one clause propagates forward to a subsequent clause without explicit repetition. The core idea is that tense, aspect, voice, or argument structure attached to a verb can influence the interpretation of following material, effectively carrying verb information through the discourse.
Origin and usage: The term was coined in a handful of late-2010s discussions by researchers examining cross-clausal
Mechanism: Verbsthrough is described as occurring when the features of a verb in a main clause constrain
Example: John said he would finish the report, and Mary did so. In this example, the second
Critical reception: Some linguists view verbsthrough as a useful label for a family of phenomena, while others