Conditionals and Prediction

This book offers a new and in-depth analysis of English conditional sentences. In a wide-ranging discussion, Dancygier classifies conditional constructions according to time-reference and modality. She shows how the basic meaning parameters of conditionality correlate to formal parameters of the linguistic constructions which are used to express them. Dancygier suggests that the function of prediction is central to the definition of conditionality, and that conditional sentences display certain formal features which correlate to aspects of interpretation. Although the analysis is based primarily on English, it provides a theoretical framework that can be extended cross-linguistically to a broad range of grammatical phenomena. It will be essential reading for scholars and students concerned with the role of conditionals in English and many other languages.

• The book offers a new linguistic analysis of conditional sentences - an area of great interest for linguists and philosophers since Aristotle • Analyses a broad range of English grammar, focusing especially on meaning and use • Advances our understanding of the relation between linguistic form and meaning, and in ways that can be applied to many languages

Contents

Acknowledgements; 1. Conditionals as a category; 2. Prediction and distance: time and modality in conditional clauses; 3. Relations between the clauses in conditional constructions; 4. Knowledge and conditional protases; 5. Conditional clauses: form and order; 6. If and other conditional conjunctions; 7. Conclusion: prototypical conditionality and related constructions; Bibliography; Indexes.