A new set of modals is appearing in contemporary English. The epistemic modals with perfect have are forming a new class including mighta, coulda, woulda, shoulda, and musta, when they are used with an additional have and without a (present) perfect meaning. I look at their structure and examine possible determinacy violations when they (and the core modals) move to C. The data come from corpus and internet sources; the study is not a quantitative one because the change is not yet particularly frequent
This thesis offers a diachronic corpus-based investigation into a largely ignored aspect of the semi...
This paper discusses how modal auxiliaries fit into a constructional view of language and how this v...
The present master’s thesis is an account of the semantic development of the two modal verbs CAN and...
The aim of this study is to investigate how the modal auxiliaries will and shall and the semi-modal ...
In recent work it has been demonstrated by various scholars that the use of modal verbs has changed ...
Extended verbal groups with multiple auxiliaries have been a focus of grammaticalization study. An i...
How do we know that would rather and may well are more idiomatic than would well or will really? Can...
peer reviewedBased on qualitative and quantitative corpus research, this chapter argues that constru...
Studies in modality comprise a complex canon of functional, formal, sociological, and diachronic ana...
Research into modality has tended to focus on modal auxiliary verbs (modals) at the expense of other...
This research has two main purposes. The first one is to test the modal replacement hypothesis propo...
The grammatical defectiveness of the English modal auxiliaries is well known. In standard usage they...
This paper sets out a new account of modality as a typological category, and applies it to English. ...
The article investigates the category of modality in the English language. The author describes the ...
The aim of this study is to examine to what extent Swedish writers, who write in English, use the mo...
This thesis offers a diachronic corpus-based investigation into a largely ignored aspect of the semi...
This paper discusses how modal auxiliaries fit into a constructional view of language and how this v...
The present master’s thesis is an account of the semantic development of the two modal verbs CAN and...
The aim of this study is to investigate how the modal auxiliaries will and shall and the semi-modal ...
In recent work it has been demonstrated by various scholars that the use of modal verbs has changed ...
Extended verbal groups with multiple auxiliaries have been a focus of grammaticalization study. An i...
How do we know that would rather and may well are more idiomatic than would well or will really? Can...
peer reviewedBased on qualitative and quantitative corpus research, this chapter argues that constru...
Studies in modality comprise a complex canon of functional, formal, sociological, and diachronic ana...
Research into modality has tended to focus on modal auxiliary verbs (modals) at the expense of other...
This research has two main purposes. The first one is to test the modal replacement hypothesis propo...
The grammatical defectiveness of the English modal auxiliaries is well known. In standard usage they...
This paper sets out a new account of modality as a typological category, and applies it to English. ...
The article investigates the category of modality in the English language. The author describes the ...
The aim of this study is to examine to what extent Swedish writers, who write in English, use the mo...
This thesis offers a diachronic corpus-based investigation into a largely ignored aspect of the semi...
This paper discusses how modal auxiliaries fit into a constructional view of language and how this v...
The present master’s thesis is an account of the semantic development of the two modal verbs CAN and...