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Full Description
Presupposition and [E]motion examines the modal semantics of presupposition in the New Testament. It argues that presupposition is the imaginative or mental exercise done by the reader or hearer to reflect, complement, or react among other features to what is being said. The book contends that the two major categories of mood, epistemic (+ assertion [Realis]) and deontic (-assertion [Irrealis]), must be seen in opposition to each other, and both together must be seen in opposition to the participle as well as to the infinitive. Ultimately, the book suggests, the importance of differentiating semantics from pragmatics, at the same time combining them within a specific context, is the key to understand the pragmatic effect of the upgraded participle.
Contents
List of Figures - List of Abbreviations - Preface - Introduction - Participle as Semantic Presupposition - Greek Participles: Modulation Versus Modality and Mood - Functions of the Participle - Semantics of the Upgraded Participle - Examination of New Testament Examples of the Upgraded Participle - Conclusion - Appendix - Bibliography - Reference Index - Subject Index - Name Index.