Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Preface
- Abbreviations and symbolic conventions
- 1 Introduction: ‘grammar blindness’ in the recent history of English?
- 2 Comparative corpus linguistics: the methodological basis of this book
- 3 The subjunctive mood
- 4 The modal auxiliaries
- 5 The so-called semi-modals
- 6 The progressive
- 7 The passive voice
- 8 Take or have a look at a corpus? Expanded predicates in British and American English
- 9 Non-finite clauses
- 10 The noun phrase
- 11 Linguistic and other determinants of change
- Appendix I The composition of the Brown Corpus
- Appendix II The C8 tagset used for part-of-speech tagging of the four corpora
- Appendix III Additional statistical tables and charts
- References
- Index
3 - The subjunctive mood
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Preface
- Abbreviations and symbolic conventions
- 1 Introduction: ‘grammar blindness’ in the recent history of English?
- 2 Comparative corpus linguistics: the methodological basis of this book
- 3 The subjunctive mood
- 4 The modal auxiliaries
- 5 The so-called semi-modals
- 6 The progressive
- 7 The passive voice
- 8 Take or have a look at a corpus? Expanded predicates in British and American English
- 9 Non-finite clauses
- 10 The noun phrase
- 11 Linguistic and other determinants of change
- Appendix I The composition of the Brown Corpus
- Appendix II The C8 tagset used for part-of-speech tagging of the four corpora
- Appendix III Additional statistical tables and charts
- References
- Index
Summary
Introduction
The analytic part of this book begins with a series of studies of major verb categories: modality, aspect and voice. As part of this, the present chapter will investigate recent changes in the use of the subjunctive mood, an inflectional category of the verb. Semantically, the subjunctive mood is closely related to the modal auxiliaries, which will be the topic of the following chapter. Just like some modal auxiliaries, the subjunctive in English can be used to express obligation or necessity (he demands that the evidence be/must be/should be demolished). In if-clauses it can express ‘irrealis’, similar to the use of such modals as could and might.
These semantically interrelated verbal categories, mood and modal auxiliaries, have been much studied both synchronically and diachronically. The demise of the subjunctive is one of the reiterated putative changes in English – both in terms of long-term developments and ongoing change in PDE. Bevier (1931: 207) calls the subjunctive a ‘disappearing feature of the English language’; Foster (1968: 220) remarks that ‘the subjunctive mood of the verb is a rather feeble and restricted device in modern English’ and Harsh (1968: 98), on the basis of his textual evidence, concludes that the ‘inflected subjunctive forms decline to the point of non-existence in present-day English’. Towards the end of the twentieth century, Givón (1993: 274) points out that ‘the old grammatical category of subjunctive has almost disappeared’, and according to Peters' most recent comment (2004: 520), the ‘subjunctive is a pale shadow of what it used to be’.
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- Change in Contemporary EnglishA Grammatical Study, pp. 51 - 70Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009
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