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The Oxford Handbook of Modality and Mood

Online ISBN:
9780191750199
Print ISBN:
9780199591435
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Book

The Oxford Handbook of Modality and Mood

Jan Nuyts (ed.),
Jan Nuyts
(ed.)
Linguistics, University of Antwerp
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Jan Nuyts (PhD 1988) is Professor in the Linguistics Department of the University of Antwerp, Belgium. His main research interests are in cognitive-functional semantics and syntax. His focus of attention is on the analysis of modal notions (evidentiality, epistemic, and deontic modality) and their linguistic expression and its implications for our understanding of the cognitive structure of language and the relations between language and conceptualization/thought. This also explains his (long-standing) concern with Cognitive Linguistics and its relations to Functional Linguistics. His publications include the books Aspects of a Cognitive-Pragmatic Theory of Language (Benjamins, 1992) and Epistemic Modality, Language and Conceptualization: A Cognitive-Pragmatic Perspective (Benjamins, 2001).

Johan van der Auwera (ed.)
Johan van der Auwera
(ed.)
Linguistics, University of Antwerp, Belgium
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Johan van der Auwera is Emeritus Professor of General and English Linguistics at the University of Antwerp. He was elected as the President of the Societas Linguistica Europaea in 2004 and as member of the Academia Europaea in 2015. His research focuses on grammatical semantics with special reference to conditionals, mood, modality, negation, indefinites, impersonals, and similatives, from a synchronic and diachronic as well as an areal perspective, and occasionally from a historiographical one. Languages studied are English, including New Englishes and Creoles, Germanic languages, European languages, and samples or interesting selections of the world’s languages.

Published online:
3 November 2014
Published in print:
28 July 2016
Online ISBN:
9780191750199
Print ISBN:
9780199591435
Publisher:
Oxford University Press

Abstract

This handbook offers an in depth and comprehensive state of the art survey of the linguistic domains of modality and mood and examines the full range of methodological and theoretical approaches to the phenomena involved. Following an opening section that provides an introduction and historical background to the topic, the volume is divided into five parts. Parts 1 and 2 present the basic linguistic facts about the systems of modality and mood in the languages of the world, covering the semantics and the expression of different subtypes of modality and mood respectively. The authors also examine the interaction of modality and mood, mutually and with other semantic categories such as aspect, time, negation, and evidentiality. In Part 3, authors discuss the features of the modality and mood systems in five typologically different language groups, while chapters in Part 4 deal with wider perspectives on modality and mood: diachrony, areality, first language acquisition, and sign language. Finally, Part 5 looks at how modality and mood are handled in different theoretical approaches: formal syntax, functional linguistics, cognitive linguistics and construction grammar, and formal semantics.

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