Questions about the development of the Romance future have engaged
scholars since Thielmann's classic statement of 1885, yet a century
later a number of the fundamental issues remain unresolved. Professor
Fleischman suggests that this is in part due to the narrow sense in
which the question has traditionally been formulated - as simply the
history of the `future-tense' slot in the grammar - and in part the
result of the investigative approach, which until recently has taken
little account of important advances in general linguistics in the field
of diachronic syntax. The present volume examines 'future' as a
conceptual category and discusses the various strategies that have been
used to map this conceptual category on to grammar in Romance. The data
are taken in the main from Western Romance languages, particularly
French, and frequent parallels are drawn with English. To account for
the evolution of the future, Professor Fleischman proposes a network of
interrelated, often cyclical developments in syntax and semantics, and
seeks to place the individual diachronic events within a broader
framework of syntactic typology and universal patterns of word-order
change.