This paper argues, on the basis of a corpus-based study of the meanings of can and may in contemporary British, American and Australian English, that a polysemy-based analysis is applicable to both modals. With may, epistemic possibility is the dominant meaning, but the dynamic and deontic possibility meanings still account for over 16.5% of tokens. By contrast the meanings of can, apart from a small percentage (1.1%) of epistemic cases, are united through the concept of potentiality. Nevertheless there are signs that the epistemic possibility meaning is becoming established, as it sheds its syntactic/semantic restriction to non-affirmative contexts
This paper intends to produce a quantitative and semantic analysis of MAY in Present-day British Eng...
This diploma thesis analyses ways of expressing Epistemic Possibility in modern English: modal verbs...
The aim of the present paper is to give a broad picture of the modal verb can, with specific referen...
Modals have several distinct uses, and the question of whether they are genuinely polysemous or have...
Until recently there have been many attempts to provide a precise characterization of modality in p...
The study is concerned with the English modal auxiliaries CAN and MAY and their morphologically past...
We need a better explanation of the differences in meaning and use between can and may. This paper p...
This paper is an attempt to characterize the meaning difference between can and may as epistemic mod...
Recent studies of English modals assume that each modal has its place in a systematic pattern of mea...
might be either inherent or optionally assigned. Such a notion is further borne out by a study of th...
Primary Modal Auxiliaries of Possibility MAY, MIGHT, CAN and COULD: going across different text type...
This paper explores the occurrence and use of the English modal verbs CAN/COULD and MAY/MIGHT convey...
Our article addresses the issue of the relationship between epistemic modality and evidentiality. E...
This article investigates the collocational behavior of English modal auxiliaries such as may and mi...
This paper presents the results of an analysis of the English modals CAN and MAY in four text types ...
This paper intends to produce a quantitative and semantic analysis of MAY in Present-day British Eng...
This diploma thesis analyses ways of expressing Epistemic Possibility in modern English: modal verbs...
The aim of the present paper is to give a broad picture of the modal verb can, with specific referen...
Modals have several distinct uses, and the question of whether they are genuinely polysemous or have...
Until recently there have been many attempts to provide a precise characterization of modality in p...
The study is concerned with the English modal auxiliaries CAN and MAY and their morphologically past...
We need a better explanation of the differences in meaning and use between can and may. This paper p...
This paper is an attempt to characterize the meaning difference between can and may as epistemic mod...
Recent studies of English modals assume that each modal has its place in a systematic pattern of mea...
might be either inherent or optionally assigned. Such a notion is further borne out by a study of th...
Primary Modal Auxiliaries of Possibility MAY, MIGHT, CAN and COULD: going across different text type...
This paper explores the occurrence and use of the English modal verbs CAN/COULD and MAY/MIGHT convey...
Our article addresses the issue of the relationship between epistemic modality and evidentiality. E...
This article investigates the collocational behavior of English modal auxiliaries such as may and mi...
This paper presents the results of an analysis of the English modals CAN and MAY in four text types ...
This paper intends to produce a quantitative and semantic analysis of MAY in Present-day British Eng...
This diploma thesis analyses ways of expressing Epistemic Possibility in modern English: modal verbs...
The aim of the present paper is to give a broad picture of the modal verb can, with specific referen...