An anankastic conditional is a grammatical construction of the form

If you want X, you have to do Y.

where Y is required in order to get X. For example:

If you wanna be my lover, you gotta get with my friends.[1]

Not all conditionals of this form have an anankastic interpretation:

If you want to eat chocolate, you should try thinking about something else.

where thinking about something else is not required in order to eat chocolate, but is rather advice on how to avoid eating chocolate.[2]

The term comes from the Greek ἀναγκαστικός "compulsory", from ἀνάγκη "necessity."[citation needed]

Anankastic conditionals have been argued to pose problems for compositional semantics.[3] Other semanticists have argued that anankastic conditionals can be interpreted the same way as "regular, hypothetical, indicative conditionals".[2]

Notes

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  1. ^ Spice Girls (1996). Wannabe. Spice. Virgin Records.
  2. ^ a b Condoravdi, Cleo; Lauer, Sven (November 30, 2016). "Anankastic conditionals are just conditionals". Semantics and Pragmatics. 9: 8:1–69. doi:10.3765/sp.9.8. ISSN 1937-8912.
  3. ^ Sæbø, Kjell Johan (1985). "Notwendige Bedingungen im Deutschen: zur Semantik modalisierter Sätze" [Anankastic conditionals in German: On the semantics of modalized sentences]. Papiere des SFB 99 (in German). 108.
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📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Anankastic

Look up anankastic in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Anankastic may refer to: Anankastic conditional, a grammatical construction Obsessive-compulsive

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include the strict conditional and the variably strict conditional. Anankastic conditional Conditional mood Modality Propositional attitude This use of past

Construction grammar

g. in the 2023 Georgetown University Roundtable on Linguistics. Anankastic conditional Construction morphology Prosodic construction Snowclone Goldberg