It appears that ''could'' or ''would'' or maybe others too are different from the 7 questions in our bag. — TheMadFool
However, isn't there any aspect of our present reality that demands a new line of questioning? — TheMadFool
Could is past tense. — TimeLine
is necessity or possibility accounted for by what, when where, which, who, how, and why? — Bitter Crank
However, isn't there any aspect of our present reality that demands a new line of questioning? — TheMadFool
Can you tell me why?But I think all questions can be reconstructed in terms of the existing 7 available question types. — TheMadFool
That's what I love about it; it is almost organic and constantly evolving that learning about it never seems to end.English is strange. — Bitter Crank
What about need?Modal verbs are auxiliary verbs that expresses necessity or possibility. English modal verbs include must, shall, will, should, would, can, could, may, and might. — Bitter Crank
The infinitive of 'can' is 'to can'. Outside of food preservation, I've never come across "to can" until a few minutes ago in a dictionary entry. — Bitter Crank
This is what I said about relational interactions between a number of various factors but accessing a function whose nature is abstracted from this model of experience or consciousness may enable unique ways of questioning reality. What would perception look like without the arrow time?Anyway it doesn't make any sense to go looking for new question words. That would mean looking for new functions. As if we don't have it covered. Language is always complete in its context. It doesn't need any help. — Baden
Can you tell me why? — TimeLine
The "to can" refers only to the food preservation sense. There is no "to can" in the other sense as it's a modal auxiliary. It doesn't have a non-finite form, i.e no "to can", no "canning" etc. — Baden
Infinitive: to can
Participle: could
Gerund: canning —
can (v.1)
Old English 1st & 3rd person singular present indicative of cunnan "know, have power to, be able," (also "to have carnal knowledge"), from Proto-Germanic *kunnan "to be mentally able, to have learned" (source also of Old Norse kenna "to know, make known," Old Frisian kanna "to recognize, admit," German kennen "to know," Gothic kannjan "to make known"), from PIE root *gno- (see know).
Absorbing the third sense of "to know," that of "to know how to do something" (in addition to "to know as a fact" and "to be acquainted with" something or someone). An Old English preterite-present verb, its original past participle, couth, survived only in its negation (see uncouth), but see also could. The present participle has spun off as cunning. — Online Etymology Dictionary
It could be that it's conjugations are computer-generated, and what would a computer know about it? — Bitter Crank
So, in the Old English (and other) sources, cunnan from which "can" is derived, would have had an infinitive form. — Bitter Crank
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