Nouns, adjectives and adverbs with modal meanings
noun
adjective
adverb
appearance
apparent
apparently
certainty
certain
certainly
evidence
evident
evidently
inevitability
inevitable
inevitably
necessity
necessary
necessarily
possibility
possible
possibly
probability
probable
probably
He took aim and fired, but it was a difficult shot with no
certainty of success.
There was no
evidence that he had been there or done any work.
The most
likely outcome will be a compromise.
There’s not
necessarily only one way of doing these things.
Would it be
possible for me to have a copy of the document?
I can
probably finish the repair work by Friday, if that’s all right.
A less frequent use of likely (but one which is quite common in North American
English) is as an adverb:
A heavy week for economic data will
likely keep trading cautious.
FOR CERTAIN, FOR DEFINITE, FOR SURE
407
The expressions for certain, for definite and for sure are also frequently used. For
definite
and for sure are especially common in informal speech. For certain usually
occurs with the verb know:
A: Did he say for definite whether he’s coming next week?
B: I’m not sure. I’ll ask him again.
After a journey like that, I won’t be flying in a two-seater plane again, that’s
for sure.
Do you
know for certain that the bus is at ten?
clear(ly)
definite(ly)
doubtless
likelihood/likely
obvious(ly)
seeming(ly)
supposed(ly)
sure(ly)
undoubted(ly)
678 | Modality
Cambridge Grammar of English
Speech acts
Introduction
408
Ways of realising speech acts
409
Clause types and speech acts
410
Declarative clauses functioning as
questions 410a
Modal verbs and interrogative
clauses as directives 410b
Interrogative clauses as
exclamations 410c
Imperative clauses as offers and
invitations 410d
Modal expressions and speech acts
411
Modality and directives (commands,
requests, advice)
412
Commands, instructions
413
Declaratives with can 413a
Declaratives with must 413b
Declaratives with will and shall 413c
You’re going to
and would you like
to
413d
Interrogatives with can, could,
will
and would 413e
Warnings, advice, suggestions
414
Declaratives with can, could, may
and might 414a
Negative interrogatives with can
and could 414b
Declaratives with must 414c
Declaratives with should 414d
Declaratives with may as well and
might (just) as well
414e
Declaratives with ought to 414f
You want to
414g
Had better
414h
Permissions, prohibitions
415
Declaratives with can and may 415a
Interrogatives with can, could, may
and might 415b
Negative forms of can, must and
may
in prohibitions 415c
Negative forms of shall and will in
prohibitions 415d
Would you mind
and do you
mind
415e
Panel: Turn-taking and asking for
permission to speak 415f
Requests
416
Interrogatives with can, could, will
and would 416a
Negative declaratives with couldn’t and
wouldn’t
416b
Declaratives with might 416c
Would you like to
416d
Want
416e
Panel: Would you mind and do you
mind
416f
Modality and commissives (offers,
invitations, promises)
417
Offers
418
Declaratives with can and could 418a
Interrogatives with can, could and
may
418b
Declaratives with ’ll 418c
Interrogatives with shall and will 418d
Do you want
, will you have and
would you like
418e
Negative don’t you want, wouldn’t you
like
and won’t you have 418f
Invitations
419
Would you like to
419a
Do you want to
419b
You must
and you’ll have to 419c
Promises, undertakings
420
Will
, shall and ’ll 420a
Non-modal expressions and speech
acts
421
What about
, what if, how about 421a
Why don’t
and why not 421b
Speech act verbs (agree, insist,
promise)
422
Performative verbs 422a
Panel: Speech act verbs and
politeness 422b
Reporting verbs 422c
Politeness
423
Tense and aspect 423a
Negation 423b
Other syntactic features of
politeness 423c
Prefaces to speech acts 423d
Panel: Please 423e
680 |
Speech acts
INTRODUCTION
408
This chapter (408–423) is concerned with interpersonal meanings of grammar,
that is, how language enables us to get things done by ourselves or by others.
The term speech act refers to what the speaker or writer is doing in uttering a
particular form of words. For example, an imperative form such as Come here!
usually has the meaning of directing the listener to act in a certain way, and a
clause such as Can you pass me that book? is likely to be a request to someone
actually to pass the book, rather than an enquiry about the person’s physical
ability. Speech acts are concerned with the speaker’s intention rather than the
content-meaning of the utterance.
In everyday written and spoken interactions, common speech acts occur
such as informing, directing, questioning, requesting, exemplifying, offering,
apologising, complaining, suggesting, promising, permitting, forbidding,
predicting and so on.
Speech acts may be divided into five broad types:
● Constatives:
The speaker asserts something about the truth of a proposition, associated with
acts such as: affirming, claiming, concluding, denying, exclaiming, maintaining,
predicting, stating beliefs.
● Directives:
The speaker intends to make the hearer act in a particular way, associated with
acts such as: advising, asking, challenging, commanding, daring, forbidding,
insisting, instructing, permitting, prohibiting, questioning, requesting,
suggesting, warning.
● Commissives:
The speaker commits to a course of action, associated with acts such as:
guaranteeing, offering, inviting, promising, vowing, undertaking.
● Expressives (or acknowledgements):
The speaker expresses an attitude or reaction concerning a state of affairs,
associated with acts such as: apologising, appreciating, complimenting,
condemning, congratulating, regretting, thanking, welcoming.
● Declarations:
The speaker performs the speech act solely by making the utterance, for
example: I pronounce you man and wife; I declare this meeting closed; I name
this ship x
.
This chapter focuses particularly on directives and commissives, as these are the
speech acts in which grammatical choices figure most prominently, especially
involving modal verbs and clause types (e.g. declarative versus interrogative).
The chapter describes how the clause structure contributes to different kinds
of speech act (such as statements, questions, directives, etc.) (
Û
410
). We also
consider the role of modal verbs in constructing speech acts such as requesting
(Would you hold this for me?), offering (I’ll carry that for you), promising (I’ll buy
you one for your birthday
), suggesting (We could stay in a bed-and-breakfast
place
), permitting (You can stay up till ten o’clock), and so on (
Û
411–420
).
There are also verbs, referred to as speech act verbs, which a speaker can use to
label a speech act explicitly (I promise you I’ll be there; He denied that he was
involved in any way
) (
Û
422
). When these are used actually to perform the
speech act (e.g. I apologise), they are called performative verbs (
Û
422a
).
The way speech acts are realised also involves politeness and the efforts
speakers make to avoid loss of face, or dignity, for themselves and their
interlocutors. For instance, a speaker who says I was wondering if I could have a
word with you?
will be heard as less direct, more polite and less imposing than
one who says I wonder if I can have a word with you, which in turn is more polite
and less imposing than someone who says I want to have a word with you. Tense
and aspect choices are therefore also implicated in speech acts (
Û
423
).
On the larger scale, speakers need to perform functions such as opening
conversations, closing them, making sure they get their turn to speak, and so on.
These are referred to in passing in this chapter (
Û
423d
) and are dealt with in
greater detail in
104–122 From discourse to social contexts
.
Speech acts can only be interpreted in context, and so it is often necessary to
use quite long examples to illustrate how particular acts are realised, especially in
face-to-face conversation, where speech acts such as requests, invitations, advice,
etc. have to be carefully negotiated between speakers and listeners and are not
necessarily realised in one phrase or clause.
Although we also exemplify speech acts in written texts, and although there are
a potentially huge number of possible speech acts which could be discussed, our
emphasis in this chapter will be on the performance of the most common,
everyday, frequent speech acts which occur in spoken contexts, using grammatical
resources. We focus particularly on those speech acts which are interactive,
involving getting others to act in a particular way.
Typical speech acts which occur in academic contexts are covered in
140–154
Grammar and academic English
.
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