This volume sets out to provide a semantics for the "future-directed
opining verbs", a novel class whose members are used to describe
subjects' externally attested opinions toward future possibilities.
Including verbs like recommend, promise, and permit, the class can
be situated within a broader range of opinion verbs, including the
well-known propositional attitudes, and key to the investigation here
are differences among these groups along the lines of available event
types, interaction with the common ground, and restrictions on subjects
and objects. Other important semantic topics implicated in the
discussion are dispositions, free choice disjunction, and
Neg-raising/embedded NPI licensing, and the host of new data associated
with the future-directed opining verbs prompts surveys of the expanded
scope of these phenomena, and corresponding re-evaluation of existing
theories. Collectively, the contributions of this work deepen our
understanding of predicates that describe opinion and disposition, and
how these interact with fundamental logical operations like negation and
disjunction, highlighting the crucial role of contextual factors like
relevance for these processes.