Conditionals: A Comprehensive Empirical Analysis

دانلود کتاب Conditionals: A Comprehensive Empirical Analysis

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توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Conditionals: A Comprehensive Empirical Analysis

نام کتاب : Conditionals: A Comprehensive Empirical Analysis
ویرایش : Reprint 2012
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : شرایط: یک تحلیل تجربی جامع
سری : Topics in English Linguistics [TiEL]; 37
نویسندگان : ,
ناشر : De Gruyter Mouton
سال نشر : 2001
تعداد صفحات : 556
ISBN (شابک) : 9783110851748 , 9783110171440
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 29 مگابایت



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Acknowledgements\nAbbreviations\nTable of contents\nChapter 1: Introduction\n1.1. Aim and scope of the work\n1.2. The structure of the book\n1.3. Terminological preliminaries\n1.4. Symbols and conventions\n1.5. The illustrative material\nChapter 2: Conditional connecting devices\n2.1. If\n2.2. Connectors expressing a necessary condition\n2.3. Unless\n2.4. In case\n2.5. Lest\n2.6. Even if and only if\n2.7. Whether...or\n2.8. Supposing, assuming, etc\n2.9. Zero-conjunction plus inversion\n2.10. Comparative conditionals\n2.11. Other clauses with a conditional connotation\n2.12. Conclusion\nChapter 3: Some preliminary terminology\n3.1. ‘Subordinate’ clauses\n3.2. ‘Fully integrated’ clauses\n3.3. Restrictive postscript-P conditionals\n3.4. Actualization conditionals\n3.5. ‘(Non)assertoric’ vs ‘(non)assertive’ clauses\n3.6. Inferential conditionals\n3.7. Implicative conditionals\n3.8. Case-specifying-P conditionals\n3.9. Set-identifying P-clauses\n3.10. Conditionals and possible worlds\n3.11. Irrealis, nonfactual, counterfactual and imaginary P-clauses\n3.12. Pseudo-Q conditionals\n3.13. ‘Denied conditionals’ vs ‘conditioned denials’\n3.14. Specificational (focusing) conditional structures\n3.15. The three canonical tense patterns of conditionals\n3.16. Conclusion\nChapter 4: The possible-world typology of conditionals\n4.1. Factual-P conditionals\n4.2. Theoretical-world conditionals\n4.3. Summary\nChapter 5: The use of tenses in possible-world conditionals\n5.1. The tense model\n5.2. The use of tenses in factual-P conditionals\n5.3. The use of tenses in neutral-P conditionals\n5.4. The use of tenses in closed-P conditionals\n5.5. The use of tenses in open-P conditionals\n5.6. The use of tenses in tentative-P conditionals\n5.7. The use of tenses in counterfactual-P conditionals\n5.8. Conclusion\nChapter 6: Modalized case-specifying conditionals\n6.1. The subjunctive\n6.2. Modal auxiliaries in the Q-clause\n6.3. Ordinary modal auxiliaries in the P-clause\n6.4. The use of special-P modals in P-clauses\n6.5. Conclusion\nChapter 7: The three canonical tense patterns\n7.1. Canonical pattern 1 conditionals\n7.2. Canonical pattern 2 conditionals\n7.3. Canonical pattern 3 conditionals\n7.4. Conclusion\nChapter 8: The relation between the theoretical world and the actual world\n8.1. Introduction\n8.2. Epistemic modalizers\n8.3. The importance of the relation between the theoretical world and the actual world\n8.4. Nonassertoric interrogative Q-clauses\n8.5. Conclusion\nChapter 9: A typology of case-specifying P-clauses\n9.1. Actualization conditionals\n9.2. Inferential conditionals\n9.3. Purely case-specifying-P conditionals\n9.4. Conclusion\nChapter 10: Rhetorical conditionals\n10.1. Utterance conditionals\n10.2. Comparing conditionals\n10.3. Commenting-P conditionals\n10.4. Pseudo-implicative conditionals\n10.5. Pleonastic conditionals\n10.6. Conclusion\nChapter 11: Syntactically marked conditional structures\n11.1. Postscript-P conditionals\n11.2. Conditional anacolutha\n11.3. Nominal-Q conditionals\n11.4. Displaced-P conditionals\n11.5. Stacked-P conditionals\n11.6. Conditionals with coordinated P-clauses or Q-clauses\n11.7. Syntactically incomplete conditionals\n11.8. Conditionals with a reduced P-clause or Q-clause\n11.9. Implicit P-conditionals\n11.10. Implicit-Q conditionals\n11.11. Semi-nominal-P conditionals\n11.12. Split conditionals\n11.13. Paratactic conditionals\n11.14. Specificational (focusing) conditional structures\n11.15. Conclusion\nChapter 12: Sufficient and/or necessary conditions\n12.1. Preliminaries\n12.2. (In)dispensable P-clauses\n12.3. Utterance-conditionals\n12.4. A/T-conditions\n12.5. Summary\nChapter 13: Uses and interpretations of unless\n13.1. Syntactically integrated nonirrealis unless-clauses\n13.2. Syntactically nonintegrated nonirrealis unless-clauses\n13.3. Unless in irrealis conditionals\n13.4. Summary\nChapter 14: The meanings and uses of even if\n14.1. The meaning of even if in implicative conditionals\n14.2. Nonimplicative even if-conditionals\n14.3. Conclusion\nGlossary\nReferences\nAuthor’s index\nSubject index




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