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Date: 20-Feb-2012 From: Julia Ulrich <julia.ulrichdegruyter.com> Subject: Modal Adjectives: Van linden E-mail this message to a friend
Title: Modal Adjectives
Subtitle: English Deontic and Evaluative Constructions in Diachrony and Synchrony
Series Title: Topics in English Linguistics [TiEL] 75
Published: 2012
Publisher: De Gruyter Mouton
http://www.degruyter.com/mouton
Author: An Van linden
Electronic: ISBN: 9783110252941 Pages: 363 Price: Europe EURO 99.95
Hardback: ISBN: 9783110252934 Pages: 363 Price: Europe EURO 99.95
Abstract:
The book revisits the notion of deontic modality from the perspective of an understudied category in the modal domain, viz. adjectives. On the basis of synchronic and diachronic corpus studies, it analyses the semantics of English adjectives like 'essential' and 'appropriate', and uses this to refine traditional definitions of deontic modality, which are mainly based on the study of modal verbs.
In a first step, it is shown that the set of meanings expressed by extraposition constructions with deontic adjectives is quite different from the set of meanings identified in the literature on modal verbs. Adjectival complement constructions lack the directive meanings of obligation or permission, which are traditionally regarded as the core deontic categories, and they have semantic extensions towards non-modal meanings in the evaluative domain. In a second step, the analysis of adjectives is used to propose an alternative definition of deontic modality, which covers both the meanings of verbs and adjectives, and which can deal with the different extensions towards modal and non-modal categories. This is integrated into a conceptual map, which works both in diachrony, defining pathways of change from premodal to modal to evaluative meaning, and in synchrony, accommodating refinements within each set of meanings. In the process, this study points to the emergence of partially filled constructions, and it offers additional evidence for well-established changes in the history of English, such as the decline of the subjunctive and the rise of the to-infinitive in complement constructions.
The book is of particular interest to researchers and graduate students with a focus on mood and modality, and the interface between syntax, semantics and pragmatics, as well as that between synchrony and diachrony.
Linguistic Field(s):
Historical Linguistics
Semantics
Syntax
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