Article published In: Corpus Studies in Contrastive Linguistics
Edited by Stefania Marzo, Kris Heylen and Gert de Sutter
[International Journal of Corpus Linguistics 15:2] 2010
► pp. 267–290
Mood and modality in finite noun complement clauses
A French-English contrastive study
Published online: 21 May 2010
https://doi.org/10.1075/ijcl.15.2.06kan
https://doi.org/10.1075/ijcl.15.2.06kan
The present paper presents a corpus-based contrastive analysis of modality in English and French finite noun complement clauses. On the one hand, we claim on the basis of cross-linguistic and semantic evidence that modality is a common intrinsic feature of nouns that license that/que complement clauses, and, as a consequence, that head nouns are modal stance markers. On the other hand, this paper shows that indicative-subjunctive alternation in that/que noun complement clauses is determined by the modality type of the governing noun. Contrastive analysis of French and English provides evidence to substantiate these claims.
Keywords: modality, modal noun, that-clause, mandative subjunctive, contrastive analysis, head noun
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