Larry, it seems you posted at the same time. I hadn't thought about that and take it back.After all, if it's a fact, what kind of stance could a speaker have about it?
I think Larry is right. You can't take a stance on a fact.
Moderators: Dimitris, maneki neko2, Lorikeet, Enrico Palazzo, superpeach, cecil2, Mr. Kalgukshi2
Does one take a stance on an utterance or incident when reporting it?Andrew Patterson wrote:Larry Lantham wrote:Larry, it seems you posted at the same time. I hadn't thought about that and take it back.After all, if it's a fact, what kind of stance could a speaker have about it?
I think Larry is right. You can't take a stance on a fact.
LarryLatham wrote:The stance of showing that he/she is not the author/creator of the fact.Lewis makes it pretty clear that modal auxiliaries mark for the speaker's stance as concerns NON-FACTUAL elements of the proposition. After all, if it's a fact, what kind of stance could a speaker have about it?
Why is the "will" here if the speaker has seen the weather report and it says "Rain tomorrow in the north. Sunny in the south."?
Speaker: It will rain tomorrow.
Courtrooms are full of stance on the facts - juries.
Here's a biggie read:Andrew Patterson wrote:Larry Lantham wrote:Larry, it seems you posted at the same time. I hadn't thought about that and take it back.After all, if it's a fact, what kind of stance could a speaker have about it?
I think Larry is right. You can't take a stance on a fact.
JuanTwoThree wrote:You'se a gem, Juan. good find. We should go back to using "willan" as a marker of habit, persistence and generic qualities. Would make things much clearer.I'm particularly struck by that "be used to" meaning of willan which would go a long way to explaining "will for habit" and "would for past habit". And that "be about to" might help with that "Xmas will fall on a Sunday this year" which had us perplexed.
And "be used to" is also "accustomed to". So:
He will keep smoking in bed. (It's so annoying.)
He is accustomed to smoking in bed. It's so annoying.
He is used to smoking in bed. It's so annoying.
In the first one, the item in brackets is not really needed to express the annoyance or displeasure (stance) of the speaker.
I've actually printed this out but somehow missed this. It's of great interest to me because these words form half of the section of my Venn diagram that links to http://www.geocities.com/endipatterson/ ... erlap.html (the overlap of "to+obj+inf" and "to+inf") The other half are verbs prefixed by "would". In the link I had referred to these verbs asboulomaic modality: can be paraphrased as it is hoped/desired/feared/regretted that…Rescher (1968: 24-6) includes want under boulomaic modality (see also Simpson 1993: 47-8). Perkins (1983: 11) classes boulomaic modality as a type of dynamic modality because of the 'disposition' meaning. It could also be said that the disposition comes from the desire of a human source so is similar to deontic volitive modalities where a subject aspires to influence the world. It ranges from not-wanting through not-opposing to wanting. (Palmer (1986: 12) suggests that 'bouletic' would be etymologically preferable.)
www.thefreedictionary.com/Suppletive = Supplying deficiencies, supplementary; as, a suppletory oath. It's the supplying deficiencies sense of course that I meant.verbs with suppletive action
Andrew Patterson wrote:You have mentioned "A BRIEF GLOSSARY OF MODALITY" website before, Metal. It also refers to boulomaic (bouletic) modality:
Just shows how impressed I was by the term then, I'd completely forgotten it.
![]()
Do you agree with Stubbs here?
Stubbs (1996) ... proposes that the category of ‘modality’ should be extended well beyond the modal verbs to include all wordings by which speakers/writers modulate their attachment to, or detachment from, the proposition.
He implies that much earlier by defining modality thus:Stubbs (1996) ... proposes that the category of ‘modality’ should be extended well beyond the modal verbs to include all wordings by which speakers/writers modulate their attachment to, or detachment from, the proposition.
And it wouldn't surprise me if that wasn't a rehash of what someone else had said. What else could it be?‘modality equals those linguistic means by which a speaker can express his attitude towards the proposition. Modality is thus the attitude of the speaker towards the content of what he says’ (Kärkkäinen: 150, Stubbs 1986: 15).
Which amounts to the same thing but somehow sounds more precise. Alternatively, you could say it it just one 's "stance" on the proposition. That being the case, modality covers ALL cases that are not mere factual propositions; not just the plain paraphrases of modality such as, "it is necessary that..." that are often trotted out. This would include all chain verbs and representations of mood except the indicative, which is by default an unframed proposition.the philosophical framework in which the proposition is interpreted.
Tell me, do you differentiate between irrealis modality and realis modality? I seems you do. And is there a real difference between alethic modality and epistemic modality?Andrew Patterson wrote:
Going back to the lions can be dangerous quote, the only way that modality can be applied to a fact is when the proposition is not "fully framed". It ceases to be a fact once fully framed and logically if a fact is indisputable in all cases, it CANNOT be framed at all.
I hadn't thought about it until you mentioned it. To an extent all modality is uncertain even if we include mood in the definition. Interogative mood: If I wasn't uncertain I wouldn't ask the question, even in rhetorical questions there is uncertainty for the listener, or indeed for the speaker if the purpose is to gather one's thoughts. The subjunctive moods, are about hopes and wishes which by their nature either have not yet happened or have and can't be changed. epistemic modality is a judgement, which is never perfect, deontic modality is about duty which may not be fulfilled, dynamic modality is about potential or volition which may not be fulfilled, either.Tell me, do you differentiate between irrealis modality and realis modality? I seems you do.