Subject: the tenses look crazy to me
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Posted on: 2009-01-08 08:38:00 UTC

The "to have" is implicit, not directly stated. The "checked" is past tense. To need to have one's head checked seems, semantically, to be expressing a desire for one's head to have been checked. We're still waiting on word from the linguistics professors on how to break down "he needs it checking", but, to me and to everyone who took part in my informal straw poll in the pub tonight, the continuous present seems a better verb form to use when referring to an action one wants to come to pass. Better than the past, anyway. It is confusing to say the least.

How would you phrase the following: "His head needs checking" or "his head needs to be checked"?

Oh, and I don't suppose you've any knowledge of modals in Latin?

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