Synopses & Reviews
Time and Modality is a unique work of reference; not only does it unite studies which explore the syntax and semantics of tense or modality but it is the first book of its kind to embrace the interaction of tense and modality within a coherent generative model. Various topics are covered in this volume: among them are the counterfactual uses of conditionals, modals, and past tense; the irrealis use of perfective aspect; a special English subjunctive; the interaction of tense assignment and the definition of an event; the modal verb as a causative verb; the interaction of modality, tense, and aktionsart; the contrast between deontic and epistemic modal with respect to tense interpretation; the syntax of epistemic modals; the long-awaited definition of generic and habitual sentence; and the introduction of intensionality in copular clauses. Although every article deals with English to some degree, two chapters compare the syntax and semantics of tense and modality in Spanish vs English. The authors also investigate Slavic, Germanic, Afro-Asiatic, Oriental, Amerindian Languages and Hungarian.
Review
From the reviews: "The theme of this volume is the grammatical relations between tense and modality. ... the book helps to develop a perspective on tense and modality and their grammaticalization cross-linguistically. The individual articles of this book present the most current advances in research on these topics. Thus, I believe students and researchers who look for detailed analyses on the syntax and semantics of modality and tense will very much benefit from this book." (Nilüfer G. Sener, The Linguist, April, 2009)
Review
From the reviews:
"The theme of this volume is the grammatical relations between tense and modality. ... the book helps to develop a perspective on tense and modality and their grammaticalization cross-linguistically. The individual articles of this book present the most current advances in research on these topics. Thus, I believe students and researchers who look for detailed analyses on the syntax and semantics of modality and tense will very much benefit from this book." (Nilüfer G. Sener, The Linguist, April, 2009)
Synopsis
Patterns in the Semantics of Generic Sentences.- Intensional Subjects and Indirect Contextual Anchoring.- Temporal Orientation in Conditionals.- On the Temporal Syntax of Non-Root Modals.- How to Say Ought in Foreign: The Composition of Weak Necessity Modals.- On the Temporal Function of Modal Verbs.- The English Perfect and the Metaphysics of Events.- Tense and Modality in Nominals.- Time With and Without Tense.- The English Konjunktiv II.- Phasing in Modals: Phases and the Epistemic/Root Distinction.
Synopsis
Here is a unique work of reference. Not only does it unite studies which explore the syntax and semantics of tense or modality, but it is the first book of its kind to embrace the interaction of tense and modality within a coherent generative model.
Table of Contents
Introduction by Jacqueline Guéron and Jacqueline Lecarme .- Patterns in the Semantics of Generic Sentences by Greg Carlson .- Intensional Subjects and Indirect Contextual Anchoring by Ileana Comorovski .- Temporal Orientation in Conditionals (Or, How I learned to stop worrying and love UFOs) by Bridget Copley .- On the Temporal Syntax of Non-Root Modals by Hamida Demirdache and Myriam Uribe-Etxebarria .- How to Say Ought in Foreign: The Composition of Weak Necessity Modals by Kai von Fintel and Sabine Iatridou .- On the Temporal Function of Modal Verbs by Jacqueline Guéron .- The English Perfect and the Metaphysics of Events by James Higginbotham .- Tense and Modality in Nominals by Jacqueline Lecarme .- Time With and Without Tense by Carlota Smith .- The English Konjunktiv II by Tim Stowell .- Phasing in Modals: Phases Heads and the Epistemic/Root Distinction by Karen Zagona