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13 - THE REALIS–IRREALIS CONTINUUM IN THE CLASSICAL GREEK CONDITIONAL

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 August 2010

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Summary

Editors' note. In describing the system of conditional sentence types of a given language, the linguist must identify both the basic formal (i.e. morphosyntactic) categories and the basic semantic categories deployed by that language. In his summary and reanalysis of the well-studied system of Classical Greek, Greenberg shows how the three moods of the Greek verb interact with conditional particles and the tense/aspect forms of the verb to express a set of nine types along the semantic dimensions of hypotheticality (particular, general, counterfactual) and time (past, present, future). This paper provides links to Veltman's in the discussion of mood and modality, Fillenbaum's on threats and promises, and Harris's on tense and aspect.

INTRODUCTION

This chapter focuses on an analysis of the conditional in Classical Greek, generally excluding the preceding Homeric period and the following Koine, both of which show differences in the relevant constructions from the intervening Classical period. Of course, many of the properties of the Greek conditional are not unique to that language. However, it does command special interest for two reasons, its complexity and the fact that it has been so intensively investigated. Apart from the specific hypotheses, the central point is that it is incumbent on the linguist to account for the formal similarities among constructions, and to employ in addition to hypotheses stemming from formal logic those arising from semantic similarities based on the typical factors found in semantic change in general.

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On Conditionals , pp. 247 - 264
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1986

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