Modality in English: Theory and Description

Salkie, Raphael, Busuttil, Pierre and van der Auwera, Johan, eds. (2009) Modality in English: Theory and Description Topics in English Linguistics, 58 . Mouton de Gruyter, Berlin. ISBN 9783110196344

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Abstract

On the one hand, there are strongly empirical, corpus-based studies of individual uses of English modal auxiliaries and modal constructions, such as may in interrogatives, might in concessive clauses, shall and may vs must in legal English, the use of surprised if and surprising if constructions, the use and history of adhortative constructions, or the modal-aspectual use of come to in I came to realize that X. The book also contains work that presents new views on some of the classical issues, like the relations between modality and time, modality and commitment, modals and (inter)subjectivity. A special place is given to work that approaches the English modals from the perspective of the 'Theory of Enunciative Operations' developed by the French linguist Antoine Culioli and his colleagues. Thus the book provides new perspectives and answers on basic questions about modality, in general, and its expression in English, in particular.

Item Type:Authored book
Additional Information:Contents Introduction. Raphael Salkie, Pierre Busuttil and Johan van der Auwera 1 Towards a typology of modality in language. Paul Larreya 9 ‘Not-yet-factual at time t’: a neglected modal concept. Renaat Declerck 31 Semantic ascent, deixis, intersubjectivity and modality. Keith Mitchell 55 Degrees of modality. Raphael Salkie 79 Another look at modals and subjectivity. Jelena Timotijevic 105 For a topological representation of the modal system of English. Alain Deschamps and Lionel Dufaye 123 Epistemic might in the interrogative. Gilbert Ghio 145 MAY in concessive contexts. Jean-Claude Souesme 159 When may means must: deontic modality in English statute construction. Ross Charnock 177 Legal English and the ‘modal revolution’. Christopher Williams 199 Posteriority in expressions with must and have to: a case of interplay between syntax, semantics and pragmatics. An Verhulst 211 Using the adjectives surprised/surprising to express epistemic modality. Christiane Rocq-Migette 223 Commitment and subjectivity in the discourse of a judicial inquiry. Juana I. Marín-Arrese 237 Hearsay adverbs and modality. Agnès Celle 269 When Yes means No, and other hidden modalities. Claude Rivière 295 Modality and the history of English adhortatives. Manfred Krug 315 On the “great modal shift” sustained by come to VP. Philippe Bourdin 349 List of contributors 375 Author index 377 Subject index 380
Uncontrolled Keywords:Modality Modals English grammar Culioli Enonciation
Subjects:Q000 Languages and Literature - Linguistics and related subjects > Q100 Linguistics
Faculties:Faculty of Arts > School of Humanities
ID Code:6586
Deposited By:Raphael Salkie
Deposited On:16 Nov 2009
Last Modified:18 Jun 2010 12:40

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