In English and other Germanic languages, modal verbs are often distinguished as a class based on certain grammatical properties.
For more detail about modals in English, see English modal verbs.
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Function
A modal auxiliary verb gives more information about the function of the main verb that it governs. Modals have a wide variety of communicative functions, but these functions can generally be related to a scale ranging from possibility ("may") to necessity ("must"), in terms of one of the following types of modality:- epistemic modality, concerned with the theoretical possibility of propositions being true or not true (including likelihood and certainty)
- deontic modality, concerned with possibility and necessity in terms of freedom to act (including permission and duty)
- dynamic modality,[2] which may be distinguished from deontic modality, in that with dynamic modality, the conditioning factors are internal – the subject's own ability or willingness to act[3]
- epistemic: You must be starving. ("It is necessarily the case that you are starving.")
- deontic: You must leave now. ("You are required to leave now.")
Epistemic modals can be analyzed as raising verbs, while deontic modals can be analyzed as control verbs.
Epistemic usages of modals tend to develop from deontic usages.[4] For example, the inferred certainty sense of English must developed after the strong obligation sense; the probabilistic sense of should developed after the weak obligation sense; and the possibility senses of may and can developed later than the permission or ability sense. Two typical sequences of evolution of modal meanings are:
- internal mental ability → internal ability → root possibility (internal or external ability) → permission and epistemic possibility
- obligation → probability
Modal verbs in Germanic languages
English
Main article: English modal verbs
The following table lists the modal auxiliary verbs of standard
English. Most of them appear more than once based upon the distinction
between deontic and epistemic modality:-
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Modal auxiliary meaning contribution Example can1 deontic/dynamic modality She can really sing. can2 epistemic modality That can indeed help. could1 deontic modality He could swim when he was young. could2 epistemic modality That could happen soon. may1 deontic modality May I stay? may2 epistemic modality That may be a problem. might epistemic modality The weather might improve. must1 deontic modality Sam must go to school. must2 epistemic modality It must be hot outside. shall deontic modality You shall not pass. should1 deontic modality You should stop that. should2 epistemic modality That should be surprising. will epistemic modality She will try to lie. would epistemic modality Nothing would accomplish that.
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- They are auxiliary verbs, which means they allow subject-auxiliary inversion and can take the negation not,
- They convey functional meaning,
- They are defective insofar as they cannot be inflected, nor do they appear in non-finite form (i.e. not as infinitives, gerunds, or participles),
- They are nevertheless always finite and thus appear as the root verb in their clause, and
- They subcategorize for an infinitive, i.e. they take an infinitive as their complement
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Defectiveness
Modals in English form a very distinctive class of verbs. They are auxiliary verbs like be, do, and have, but they are defective insofar as they cannot be inflected like these other auxiliary verbs, e.g. have → has vs. should → *shoulds, do → did vs. may → *mayed, etc. In clauses that contain two or more verbs, any modal that is present appears as the left-most verb in the verb catena (= chain of verbs). What this means is that the modal verb is always finite (although it is, as stated, never inflected). In the syntactic structure of the clause, the modal verb is the clause root. The following dependency grammar trees illustrate the point:-
- a. Sam may have done his homework. - The modal auxiliary may is the root of the clause.
- b. *Sam has may done his homeowork. - The sentence fails because the modal auxiliary may is not the root of the clause.
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- a. Jim will be helped. - The modal auxiliary will is the root of the clause.
- b. *Jim is will be helped. - The sentence fails because the modal auxiliary will is not the root of the clause.
Other Germanic languages
The table below lists some modal verbs with common roots in English, German and Dutch. English modal auxiliary verb provides an exhaustive list of modal verbs in English, and German verb#Modal verbs provides a list for German, with translations. Dutch verbs#Irregular verbs gives conjugations for some Dutch modals.Words in the same row of the table below share the same etymological root. Because of semantic drift, however, words in the same row may no longer be proper translations of each other. In addition, the English and German verbs will are completely different in meaning, and the German one has nothing to do with constructing the future tense. These words are false friends.
In English, the plural and singular forms are identical. For German and Dutch, both the plural and singular form of the verb are shown.
Etymological relatives (not translations)
English | German | Dutch |
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can | können, kann | kunnen, kan |
shall | sollen, soll | zullen, zal |
will | wollen, will | willen, wil |
must | müssen, muss | moeten, moet |
may | mögen, mag | mogen, mag |
tharf[5] | dürfen, darf | durven, durf |
The English verbs dare and need have both a modal use (he dare not do it), and a non-modal use (he doesn't dare to do it). The Dutch verb durven is not considered a modal (but it is there, nevertheless) because its modal use has disappeared, but it has a non-modal use analogous with the English dare. Some English modals consist of more than one word, such as "had better" and "would rather".[6]
Some other English verbs express modality although they are not modal verbs because they are not auxiliaries, including want, wish, hope, and like. All of these differ from the modals in English (with the disputed exception of ought (to)) in that the associated main verb takes its long infinitive form with the particle to rather than its short form without to, and in that they are fully conjugated.
Morphology and syntax
Germanic modal verbs are preterite-present verbs, which means that their present tense has the form of a vocalic preterite. This is the source of the vowel alternation between singular and plural in German and Dutch. Because of their preterite origins, modal verbs also lack the suffix (-s in modern English, -t in German and Dutch) that would normally mark the third person singular form:normal verb | modal verb | |
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English | he works | he can |
German | er arbeitet | er kann |
Dutch | hij werkt | hij kan |
normal verb | modal verb | |
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English | he tries to work | he can work |
German | er versucht zu arbeiten | er kann arbeiten |
Dutch | hij probeert te werken | hij kan werken |
normal verb | modal verb | |
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affirmative | he works | he can work |
negation | he does not work | he cannot work |
emphatic | he does work hard | he can work hard |
question | does he work here? | can he work at all? |
negation + question | does he not work here? | can he not work at all? |
In English, modal verbs are called defective verbs because of their incomplete conjugation: they have a narrower range of functions than ordinary verbs. For example, most have no infinitive or gerund.
Modal verbs in other languages
Hawaiian Creole English
Hawaiian Creole English is a creole language most of whose vocabulary, but not grammar, is drawn from English. As is generally the case with creole languages, it is an isolating language and modality is typically indicated by the use of invariant pre-verbal auxiliaries.[7] The invariance of the modal auxiliaries to person, number, and tense makes them analogous to modal auxiliaries in English. However, as in most creoles the main verbs are also invariant; the auxiliaries are distinguished by their use in combination with (followed by) a main verb.There are various preverbal modal auxiliaries: kaen "can", laik "want to", gata "have got to", haeftu "have to", baeta "had better", sapostu "am/is/are supposed to". Unlike in Germanic languages, tense markers are used, albeit infrequently, before modals: gon kaen kam "is going to be able to come". Waz "was" can indicate past tense before the future/volitional marker gon and the modal sapostu: Ai waz gon lift weits "I was gonna lift weights"; Ai waz sapostu go "I was supposed to go".
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