Abstract
Within the model of Cognitive Grammar, the concept of dominion is fundamental to the analysis of the conceptualizer's attitude toward an event or a proposition. However, the concept has, first and foremost, been understood in epistemic terms, whereas there has been less concern with the conceptualizer's efforts to influence and manipulate the course of events in the world. This being so, the present paper shows that the conceptualizer's dominion of effective control is relevant in a number of linguistic contexts. The analysis provides evidence for this particular feature in factive contexts, deontic contexts, contexts of volition and causation, and in adverbial clauses of purpose, manner and condition. The analysis further shows that the conceptualizer's dominion of effective control is capable of providing a conceptually grounded explanation for the occurrence of the Spanish and the Portuguese subjunctive mood in these grammatical contexts.
©2014 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Munich/Boston
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Cooking from cold to hot: goal-directedness in simulation and language
- Extending the dominion of effective control – Its applicability to mood choice in Spanish and Portuguese
- Recycling utterances: A speaker's guide to sentence processing
- What's in a dialogic construction? A constructional approach to polysemy and the grammar of challenge
- Manners of human gait: a crosslinguistic event-naming study
- Book Review
- Book Review
- Book Review
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Cooking from cold to hot: goal-directedness in simulation and language
- Extending the dominion of effective control – Its applicability to mood choice in Spanish and Portuguese
- Recycling utterances: A speaker's guide to sentence processing
- What's in a dialogic construction? A constructional approach to polysemy and the grammar of challenge
- Manners of human gait: a crosslinguistic event-naming study
- Book Review
- Book Review
- Book Review