Modals: Striving for control
Ronald W. Langacker
págs. 3-56
Contemporary change in modal usage in spoken British English: mapping the impact of "genre"
Jill Bowie, Sean Wallis, Bas Aarts
págs. 57-94
Where have all the modals gone? An essay on the declining frequency of core modal auxiliaries in recent standard English
Geoffrey Leech
págs. 95-118
Had better, 'd better and better: Diachronic and transatlantic variation
Johan van der Auwera, Dirk Noël, An Van Linden
págs. 119-154
Grammatical colloquialism and the English quasi-modals: a comparative study
Peter Collins
págs. 155-170
Modal necessity and impersonality in English and Galician
Lucía Loureiro Porto
págs. 171-200
Modal uses of the Engllish present progressive
Frank Brisard, Astrid de Wit
págs. 201-220
On the generic argument for the modality of will
Debra Ziegeler
págs. 221-252
Reality and related concepts: towards a semantic-pragmatic map of English adverbs
Anne Marie Simon Vandenbergen
págs. 253-280
A cross-linguistic look at the multifunctionality of the English verb seem
Aurelia Usoniene, Jolanta Sinkuniene
págs. 281-316
Annotating English adverbials for the categories of epistemic modality and evidentiality
Marta Carretero Lapeyre, Juan Rafael Zamorano Mansilla
págs. 317-358
Modal verbs in news-related blogs: When the blogger counts
Roberta FACCHINETTI
págs. 359-378
Modality and personal pronouns as indexical markers of stance: Intersubjective positioning and construction of public indentity in media interviews
Laura Hidalgo Downing, Begoña Núñez Perucha
págs. 379-410
Stancetaking and inter/subjectivity in the Iraq Inquiry: Blair vs. Brown
Juana Isabel Marín Arrese
págs. 411-446
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