Les doubles modaux anglais, témoins d’un changement de catégorie

Current English varieties have a class of modal verbs which are syntactically and morphologically irregular. In Standard English these verbs do not have a third person -s present tense inflection, an -ing form, a past participle; they do not permit a direct object and are not followed by another mod...

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Main Author: Patrice Larroque
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses Universitaires du Midi 2010-12-01
Series:Anglophonia
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/anglophonia/642
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spelling doaj-6e601a578d61457ba11bb17d8e2007302020-11-25T01:54:24ZengPresses Universitaires du MidiAnglophonia1278-33312427-04662010-12-011411713410.4000/anglophonia.642Les doubles modaux anglais, témoins d’un changement de catégoriePatrice LarroqueCurrent English varieties have a class of modal verbs which are syntactically and morphologically irregular. In Standard English these verbs do not have a third person -s present tense inflection, an -ing form, a past participle; they do not permit a direct object and are not followed by another modal verb.While a double modal construction was possible in Early Modern English and is still found in some regional non-standard varieties in the southern states of America, the north of England (in the Midlands), and Scotland, it is no longer in use in Standard English.Although such structures as I might could be able to visit ..., I’d might just let you know, She shouldn’t ought to be there, We’ll shall go, erm, go to the market, are now accounted mistakes, they are nonetheless diachronically and synchronically interesting. Historically, English has, between the 16th and the 19th century, undergone a category change and innovated a new class of verbs. From a synchronic point of view, double modal constructions may bring out, among other things, the root and the epistemic readings of a modal.The study, therefore, confronts the modal system in the English grammar, past and present, with current double modal constructions in an attempt to account for the grammaticalness of the latter.http://journals.openedition.org/anglophonia/642English grammarNon-Standard Englishvariational linguisticsmodal verbsdouble modal constructions
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patrice Larroque
spellingShingle Patrice Larroque
Les doubles modaux anglais, témoins d’un changement de catégorie
Anglophonia
English grammar
Non-Standard English
variational linguistics
modal verbs
double modal constructions
author_facet Patrice Larroque
author_sort Patrice Larroque
title Les doubles modaux anglais, témoins d’un changement de catégorie
title_short Les doubles modaux anglais, témoins d’un changement de catégorie
title_full Les doubles modaux anglais, témoins d’un changement de catégorie
title_fullStr Les doubles modaux anglais, témoins d’un changement de catégorie
title_full_unstemmed Les doubles modaux anglais, témoins d’un changement de catégorie
title_sort les doubles modaux anglais, témoins d’un changement de catégorie
publisher Presses Universitaires du Midi
series Anglophonia
issn 1278-3331
2427-0466
publishDate 2010-12-01
description Current English varieties have a class of modal verbs which are syntactically and morphologically irregular. In Standard English these verbs do not have a third person -s present tense inflection, an -ing form, a past participle; they do not permit a direct object and are not followed by another modal verb.While a double modal construction was possible in Early Modern English and is still found in some regional non-standard varieties in the southern states of America, the north of England (in the Midlands), and Scotland, it is no longer in use in Standard English.Although such structures as I might could be able to visit ..., I’d might just let you know, She shouldn’t ought to be there, We’ll shall go, erm, go to the market, are now accounted mistakes, they are nonetheless diachronically and synchronically interesting. Historically, English has, between the 16th and the 19th century, undergone a category change and innovated a new class of verbs. From a synchronic point of view, double modal constructions may bring out, among other things, the root and the epistemic readings of a modal.The study, therefore, confronts the modal system in the English grammar, past and present, with current double modal constructions in an attempt to account for the grammaticalness of the latter.
topic English grammar
Non-Standard English
variational linguistics
modal verbs
double modal constructions
url http://journals.openedition.org/anglophonia/642
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