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The use of modal expression preference as a marker of style and attribution

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  • 169 pages
  • 6 hours of reading

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Can an author’s preference for expressing modality be quantified and then used as a marker of attribution? This book explores the possibility of using the subjunctive mood as an indicator of style and a marker of authorship in Early Modern English texts. Using three works by the sixteenth-century biblical translator and polemicist, William Tyndale, Elizabeth Bell Canon establishes a predictable preference for certain types of modal expression. The theory of subjunctive use as a marker of attribution was then tested on the anonymous 1533 English translation of Erasmus’ Enchiridion Militis Christiani . Also included in this book is a modern English spelling version Tyndale’s The Parable of the Wicked Mammon .

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The use of modal expression preference as a marker of style and attribution, Elizabeth Bell Canon

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Released
2010
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