
Apprehensional constructions in a cross-linguistic perspective
Language Science Press
1st Edition
Published on 24. April 2026
Book
Hardback
556 pages
978-3-98554-176-8 (ISBN)
Description
The functional domain of apprehensionality encompasses grammatical markers or constructions which conventionally encode or pragmatically implicate that the situation described by the clause is an undesirable possibility. Its main manifestations discussed in this volume are (i) apprehensives, which are modal markers which can occur in main clauses, and thus could serve to translate English might in Don't go near this dog, it might bite (but also add a component of undesirability), and (ii) precautionary subordinators such as English lest in Don't go near this dog, lest it bite. As just illustrated, such elements tend to occur in warnings and are often but not necessarily accompanied by an instruction as to how to avoid the undesirable situation. Although wide-spread cross-linguistically, they have received very little attention in the linguistic literature and their discussion has been mostly restricted to brief sections in language-specific discussions of some lesser studied languages. This volume addresses this gap by presenting in-depth discussions of apprehensional markers in individual languages (and in some contributions, language groups), by experts on these languages and based on first-hand data. The editors' introduction offers a review of the existing literature, including of the varied terminology used and of the main research questions arising. The individual papers present detailed investigations of the semantic and pragmatic properties of the construction(s) in question, their syntactic status, and in many cases also their diachrony. The final contribution is a questionnaire for the in-depth exploration of variation within apprehensional constructions. The volume is aimed at typologists, semanticists interested in modality, and general linguists.
More details
Series
Edition
1. Auflage
Language
English
Place of publication
Berlin
Germany
Target group
Wissenschaft
Edition type
New edition
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Dimensions
Height: 246 mm
Width: 175 mm
Thickness: 40 mm
Weight
1223 gr
ISBN-13
978-3-98554-176-8 (9783985541768)
DOI
10.5281/zenodo.17977288
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Editor
Martina Faller is a senior lecturer at the University of Manchester (UK). She has a long-standing research interest in the semantics-pragmatics interface from a cross-linguistic perspective. She has made major contributions to the study of evidentiality, including its relation to modality based on original fieldwork on Cuzco Quechua (Peru), and developed a speech act account of evidentials in this language. She has also published on quantification, pluractionality and the multifunctionality of alternative-sensitive particles.
Marine Vuillermet has worked with the Ese Ejja people (Tacanan, Bolivia) since 2005, and has written a grammar of the language. Her study of the language has led her to especially investigate apprehensionality from a typological perspective. She has also published on other semantic and syntactic aspects of Ese Ejja, and on the typology of spatial expressions, and she is one of the editors of the Areal Typology of Languages of the Americas (ATLAs) database.
Eva Schultze-Berndt is a professor of linguistics at the University of Manchester (UK). Her research interests include complex and secondary predication, part of speech systems, information structure, differential argument marking, epistemic authority, and language contact. She has conducted extensive fieldwork on the Australian languages Jaminjung-Ngaliwurru (Mirndi), and to a lesser extent Ngarinyman (Ngumpin-Yapa) and Kriol. Her interest in modality stems from observing the diversity of modal systems, specifically the diverse strategies of apprehensional marking, in Australian languages.