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The auxiliary dare is unique among modals in that it both allows
DO-support and exhibits a past tense form. It clearly falls in modal position
since no other auxiliary (except do) may precede it in linear
order21.7. Examples appear below.
(408)0(408
- (409)
- she dare not have been seen .
(409)0(409
- (410)
- she does not dare succeed .
(410)0(410
- (411)
- Jerry dared not look left or right .
(411)0(411
- (412)
- only models dare wear such extraordinary outfits .
(412)0(412
- (413)
- dare Dale tell her the secret ?
(413)0(413
- (414)
- Louise had dared not tell a soul .
As mentioned above, auxiliaries are prevented from having DO-support within the
XTAG system. To allow for DO-support in this case, we had to create a lexical
entry for dare that allowed it to have the feature mainv+ and to have base mode (this measure is
what also allows dare to occur in double-modal sequences). A second
lexical entry was added to handle the regular modal occurrence of dare.
Additionally, all other modals are classified as being present tense, while
dare has both present and past forms. To handle this behavior, dare was given similar features to the other modals in the morphology minus
the specification for tense.
Next: Other semi-auxiliaries
Up: Semi-Auxiliaries
Previous: Semi-Auxiliaries
XTAG Project
http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~xtag