From premodal to modal meaning: Adjectival pathways in English
Abstract
This article approaches common topics in the diachronic literature on modal categories from the perspective of adjectives. It thus expands on what has been found for the better studied category of modal auxiliaries as regards sources of modal meaning and pathways of change. Most importantly, it proposes two new pathways from premodal to (dynamic) modal meaning, one followed by essential and vital, and one followed by crucial and critical. It also shows that in the four cases the development of dynamic meaning depends on the emergence of two semantic properties, viz. relationality and potentiality. Finally, this study makes it clear that the mechanisms driving the various semantic changes are not new, but rather have proved useful in explaining a varied set of developments. For the final semantic extension of the adjectives from dynamic to deontic meaning, for instance, the process of subjectification (Traugott, Language 65: 31–55, 1989) will be invoked.
© 2010 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/New York
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Articles in the same Issue
- The English past tense: Analogy redux
- Who thinks that a piece of furniture refers to a broken couch? Count-mass constructions and individuation in English and Spanish
- Fields and settings: French il and ça impersonals in copular complement constructions
- Differences in continuity of force dynamics and emotional valence in sentences with causal and adversative connectives
- From premodal to modal meaning: Adjectival pathways in English
- The relation between iconicity and subjectification in Portuguese complementation: Complements of perception and causation verbs