by LucÃa Loureiro-Porto (Author)
In the history of English at least five verbs have been found to mean 'need': purfan, bepurfan, need, behove and mister. By adopting a corpus-based approach, this book studies all of them diachronically, from the origins of the language (c.750) to the end of the early Modern English period (1710). Offers a detailed analysis of the meaning of these five verbs which have been found to mean 'need', filling a gap in the literature on modality and shedding new light on grammaticalization theory Spans the period c.750 to 1710, adopting a corpus-based approach to study the verbs diachronically Explores the evolution of necessity meanings in English, identifying regular semantic changes and challenging some well-established statements Provides a detailed grammaticalization analysis, paying attention to the different Present-Day-English modal classes, including marginal and emerging modals
Format: Illustrated
Pages: 292
Edition: 1
Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell
Published: 18 Sep 2009
ISBN 10: 1405192704
ISBN 13: 9781405192705