I don't get these quibbles. We have two separate meanings: "gonna" is essentially a future tense, "go" is a movement verb. Insisting on the etymological meaning, based on accidents of the writing system, is just an error. What do you think linguists do when etymology is not available, as with unwritten languages?rotting bones wrote: ↑Mon Jan 12, 2026 2:28 am If "gonna" were used to mean anything other than "going to", "going to" were contracted into anything other than "gonna", there were also sentences that accepted "gonna" but not "going to", etc., then I would have an easier time separating the two.
English is mild with this sort of thing, wait till you get to the French verbal complex. If you look at it synchronically, without getting misled by the orthography, it looks a lot like the Swahili verbal system.
If you're thinking about Future English or something, recall that words turn into clitics, clitics turn into affixes. Today's syntax is next millennium's morphology.Then again, since English relies very heavily on syntax, maybe developments in syntax would be the most significant for English?
Contractions don't work that way in English. "It really is" doesn't contract to "It's really".The uncontracted sentence isn't, "You can, cannot you?" It's, "You can, can you not?"zompist wrote: ↑Mon Jan 12, 2026 12:59 am (Here's an example of differential contraction. "You can, can't you?" can no longer be stated "You can, cannot you?" On the other hand, when you stress a modal, "not" must receive the stress if it's present, and "n't" must not: "I should not drink more coffee" / "I shouldn't drink more coffee.")
The example shows that the contraction "can't" has slightly different syntax than the uncontracted form "cannot"-- which is unusual in English.
It's quite valid to ask why "gonna" works differently. More of a case has to be made, sure. I've already suggested that you'd have to look at all the Aux+P combinations Travis listed. The fact that "gonna" has a specific meaning is also relevant; nothing like that is happening with "can't".