A New Architecture for Functional Grammar (Functional Grammar Series)

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270 Jean-Christophe Verstraete


not all clauses introduced by if have the function of suspending the
speaker's commitment: there are for instance what they call performative
conditionals, where the if-clause contains a performatively used performa-
tive verb. Accordingly, such conditionals will not trigger any echo effect for
subjective modals, since it is only the commitment-suspending function of if
that leads to echo interpretation for subjective modals.


  1. In fact, this use of deontic modality is more typically realized by periphras-
    tic modals like have to rather than modal auxiliaries like must (Palmer 1990:
    113–116, Declerck 1991a: 376–377).

  2. See, however, the more descriptively oriented typology in Hengeveld
    (forthcoming).

  3. In this respect it is not surprising that Palmer (1990: 113) lists such exam-
    ples as dynamic necessity.

  4. That is, of course, without change of interpretation. Adding a propositional
    attitude marker to a subjective deontic expression is always possible, but
    necessarily shifts it from the subjective to the objective category. It is in fact
    a common rhetorical strategy to add propositional attitude markers to orders
    or prohibitions, in order to present the obligation as somehow existing inde-
    pendently of the speaker, as in Unfortunately, you cannot enter this
    building.

  5. As I have shown in Section 5.2, such configurations do occur, but crucially
    only in structures with nonsubjective deontic modality, which are interper-
    sonally epistemic utterances about the existence of necessity or obligation.

  6. There have been a number of proposals in the same direction within the FG
    tradition, for instance in Moutaouakil’s (1996) argument that only declara-
    tive clauses contain a propositional layer and in Hengeveld’s (1990)
    argument that imperative clauses lack a propositional layer. If the proposi-
    tional layer is tied to the grammatical feature of tense, however, neither of
    these proposals is entirely adequate: epistemic interrogatives are tensed just
    like their declarative counterparts, and subjective-deontic declaratives are
    tenseless just like their imperative counterparts.

  7. In the traditional model, the distinction between proposition and predication
    was motivated in terms of the interpersonal-representational distinction
    (Hengeveld 1989: 127–131). In Hengeveld’s new proposal (this volume),
    what used to be the propositional layer now belongs both to the interper-
    sonal component (as the ‘C’ variable) and to the representational component
    (as the ‘p’ variable). This implies that the proposition-predication distinc-
    tion is no longer motivated by the interpersonal-representational distinction
    but requires a new motivation. The structural property of presence vs ab-
    sence of tense is probably a good candidate for this purpose: location with
    respect to the temporal zero-point is a necessary prerequisite for epistemic
    negotiation about truth or falsity, as argued by Halliday (1994: 75).

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