Modality in the Albanian language: A corpus-based analysis of administrative discourse

This article investigates modality as a central linguistic category in Albanian, arguing that it is a foundational element in how institutional authority, obligation, and procedural certainty are codified and framed linguistically in administrative discourse. Modality, which expresses the speaker’s...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Çepani Anila, Rushiti Rozana
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2025-08-01
Series:Open Linguistics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/opli-2025-0061
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849330579845152768
author Çepani Anila
Rushiti Rozana
author_facet Çepani Anila
Rushiti Rozana
author_sort Çepani Anila
collection DOAJ
description This article investigates modality as a central linguistic category in Albanian, arguing that it is a foundational element in how institutional authority, obligation, and procedural certainty are codified and framed linguistically in administrative discourse. Modality, which expresses the speaker’s stance toward a proposition – covering obligation, possibility, necessity, permission, and evidentiality – is examined through both theoretical and empirical lenses. Building on frameworks from Jespersen to Kratzer and Palmer, the study traces the evolution of modality from mood-based approaches to formal semantic and discourse-functional models. The empirical analysis draws on ALDOC (Albanian Documents Corpus), a 1.5-million-token collection of institutional texts. Using LancsBox 6.0, the article examines modality as realized through verb moods (indicative, subjunctive, and imperative), modal verbs (duhet, mund, and do), modal particles (nuk, mos, po, and jo), and fixed modal expressions (e.g., është e nevojshme and është e pamundur). Findings show a strong preference for deontic and epistemic modality, reflecting the legalistic and depersonalized nature of administrative discourse. The study reveals that Albanian institutional texts employ a narrow, formal set of modal resources to ensure objectivity and clarity. Informal or subjective expressions are systematically avoided. This corpus-based analysis contributes to Albanian linguistics and cross-linguistic modality studies, emphasizing the need for typological and pragmatic integration in the study of institutional language.
format Article
id doaj-art-2473e3314fd74b758d3d96cd6a2a7541
institution Kabale University
issn 2300-9969
language English
publishDate 2025-08-01
publisher De Gruyter
record_format Article
series Open Linguistics
spelling doaj-art-2473e3314fd74b758d3d96cd6a2a75412025-08-20T03:46:52ZengDe GruyterOpen Linguistics2300-99692025-08-011113364210.1515/opli-2025-0061Modality in the Albanian language: A corpus-based analysis of administrative discourseÇepani Anila0Rushiti Rozana1Department of Linguistics, University of Tirana, Tirana, AlbaniaDepartment of Linguistics, University of Tirana, Tirana, AlbaniaThis article investigates modality as a central linguistic category in Albanian, arguing that it is a foundational element in how institutional authority, obligation, and procedural certainty are codified and framed linguistically in administrative discourse. Modality, which expresses the speaker’s stance toward a proposition – covering obligation, possibility, necessity, permission, and evidentiality – is examined through both theoretical and empirical lenses. Building on frameworks from Jespersen to Kratzer and Palmer, the study traces the evolution of modality from mood-based approaches to formal semantic and discourse-functional models. The empirical analysis draws on ALDOC (Albanian Documents Corpus), a 1.5-million-token collection of institutional texts. Using LancsBox 6.0, the article examines modality as realized through verb moods (indicative, subjunctive, and imperative), modal verbs (duhet, mund, and do), modal particles (nuk, mos, po, and jo), and fixed modal expressions (e.g., është e nevojshme and është e pamundur). Findings show a strong preference for deontic and epistemic modality, reflecting the legalistic and depersonalized nature of administrative discourse. The study reveals that Albanian institutional texts employ a narrow, formal set of modal resources to ensure objectivity and clarity. Informal or subjective expressions are systematically avoided. This corpus-based analysis contributes to Albanian linguistics and cross-linguistic modality studies, emphasizing the need for typological and pragmatic integration in the study of institutional language.https://doi.org/10.1515/opli-2025-0061modalityalbanian languagedeontic and epistemic modalityofficial discoursemodal verbscorpus linguistics
spellingShingle Çepani Anila
Rushiti Rozana
Modality in the Albanian language: A corpus-based analysis of administrative discourse
Open Linguistics
modality
albanian language
deontic and epistemic modality
official discourse
modal verbs
corpus linguistics
title Modality in the Albanian language: A corpus-based analysis of administrative discourse
title_full Modality in the Albanian language: A corpus-based analysis of administrative discourse
title_fullStr Modality in the Albanian language: A corpus-based analysis of administrative discourse
title_full_unstemmed Modality in the Albanian language: A corpus-based analysis of administrative discourse
title_short Modality in the Albanian language: A corpus-based analysis of administrative discourse
title_sort modality in the albanian language a corpus based analysis of administrative discourse
topic modality
albanian language
deontic and epistemic modality
official discourse
modal verbs
corpus linguistics
url https://doi.org/10.1515/opli-2025-0061
work_keys_str_mv AT cepanianila modalityinthealbanianlanguageacorpusbasedanalysisofadministrativediscourse
AT rushitirozana modalityinthealbanianlanguageacorpusbasedanalysisofadministrativediscourse