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Re-Assessing Modalising Expressions
Categories, co-text, and context
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Edited by:
Pascal Hohaus
and Rainer Schulze
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
2020
About this book
Mood, modality and evidentiality are popular and dynamic areas in linguistics. Re-Assessing Modalising Expressions – Categories, co-text, and context focuses on the specific issue of the ways language users express permission, obligation, volition (intention), possibility and ability, necessity and prediction linguistically.
Using a range of evidence and corpus data collected from different sources, the authors of this volume examine the distribution and functions of a range of patterns involving modalising expressions as predominantly found in standard American English, British English or Hong Kong English, but also in Japanese. The authors are particularly interested in addressing (co-)textual manifestations of modalising expressions as well as their distribution across different text-types and thus filling a gap research was unable to plug in the past. Thoughts on categorising or re-categorising modalising expressions initiate and complement a multi-perspectival enterprise that is intended to bring research in this area a step forward.
Using a range of evidence and corpus data collected from different sources, the authors of this volume examine the distribution and functions of a range of patterns involving modalising expressions as predominantly found in standard American English, British English or Hong Kong English, but also in Japanese. The authors are particularly interested in addressing (co-)textual manifestations of modalising expressions as well as their distribution across different text-types and thus filling a gap research was unable to plug in the past. Thoughts on categorising or re-categorising modalising expressions initiate and complement a multi-perspectival enterprise that is intended to bring research in this area a step forward.
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Table of contents
v -
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Chapter 1. Modalising expressions and modality
1 - Section I. Moving to modal categories
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Chapter 2. Revisiting global and intra-categorial frequency shifts in the English modals
19 -
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Chapter 3. The scope of modal categories
47 -
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Chapter 4. Not just frequency, not just modality
79 -
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Chapter 5. How and why seem became an evidential
109 - Section II. Moving to modal co-text
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Chapter 6. Conditionals, modality, and Schrödinger’s cat
143 -
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Chapter 7. Modal marking in conditionals. Grammar, usage and discourse
173 -
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Chapter 8. Present-day English constructions with chance ( s ) in Talmy’s greater modal system and beyond
195 - Section III. Moving to modal context
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Chapter 9. A genre-based analysis of evaluative modality in multi-verb sequences in English
225 -
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Chapter 10. Epistemic modals in academic English
253 -
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Chapter 11. On the (con)textual properties of must , have to and shall
281 -
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Chapter 12. “The future elected government should fully represent the interests of Hongkong people”
311 -
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Subject Index
343
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
October 28, 2020
eBook ISBN:
9789027260529
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
344
eBook ISBN:
9789027260529
Audience(s) for this book
Professional and scholarly;