Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 233224
Subjunctive mood in Croatian: searching for a paradigm
Subjunctive mood in Croatian: searching for a paradigm // Abstracts of the 3rd Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Conference : Perspectives On Slavistics
Leuven, Belgija, 2004. (ostalo, međunarodna recenzija, sažetak, stručni)
CROSBI ID: 233224 Za ispravke kontaktirajte CROSBI podršku putem web obrasca
Naslov
Subjunctive mood in Croatian: searching for a paradigm
Autori
Zovko Dinković, Irena ; Geld, Renata
Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Sažeci sa skupova, sažetak, stručni
Izvornik
Abstracts of the 3rd Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Conference : Perspectives On Slavistics
/ - , 2004
Skup
Slavic Cognitive Linguistics Conference : (3 ; 2004)
Mjesto i datum
Leuven, Belgija, 17.09.2004. - 20.09.2004
Vrsta sudjelovanja
Ostalo
Vrsta recenzije
Međunarodna recenzija
Ključne riječi
subjunctive mood; present tense; non-temporal uses; cognitive approach
Sažetak
The subjunctive mood is nowhere explicitly mentioned in grammars of Croatian and there are no separate verb forms for the subjunctive as we find them in languages such as French. However, aside from the indicative and imperative, the conditional is cited as a third mood in Croatian. The conditional mood has a separate paradigm of verb forms (past and present) used not only in conditional clauses (the so-called if-clauses), but also to express a whole range of subjunctive meanings: wishes, demands, proposals, concession, etc. It is interesting that Croatian employs three other forms to convey the subjunctive meaning: the past perfect tense, the perfective present and the perfective future forms. Whereas the perfective future forms may only appear in if-clauses, the former two may appear either in if-clauses, or in clauses which express some other kind of subjunctive meaning. In many instances conditional verb forms may be replaced by perfective present forms, which apparently causes a change in meaning. This paper therefore investigates two issues: the first one is whether the Croatian conditional is truly equivalent to what in other languages is called the subjunctive mood, and second, what differences in meaning underlie the use of conditional verb forms as opposed to perfective present forms in the same context.
Izvorni jezik
Engleski
Znanstvena područja
Filologija