Jakobson (1957) bases the analysis of mood on a three-part structure that crucially involves two participant variables. Although the definition of evidentiality in Jakobson (1957) differs in some fundamental ways, it also allows for the explication of a participant structure inherent in evidential meanings. In this paper I argue that by exploring the interaction between these participant structures in multiple-perspective constructions and in reported speech, the framework proposed in Jakobson (1957) enables us to systematically examine phenomena that are typically assumed to arise in evidential expressions as pragmatic effects, particularly ‘commitment effets’ and evidential interpretations of modals. I propose that this approach presents ...
Languages vary in how they encode and interpret attested information. The present research examined ...
Languages vary in how they encode and interpret attested information. The present research examined ...
Some languages have evidential morphemes, which mark the Speaker\u27s source for the information bei...
Jakobson (1957) bases the analysis of mood on a three-part structure that crucially involves two par...
The paper argues for a view of evidentials as a type of shifter and outlines a theory of reference f...
The dissertation is devoted to the formal mechanisms that govern the use of evidentials, expressions...
The notion of linguistic stance as a non-grammaticalized form of evidentiality is here explored thro...
We present a new experimental paradigm for investigating lexical expressions that convey different s...
The paper focuses on inter-personal aspects of the context in the analysis of evidential and related...
This paper attempts to show that the linguistic or discursive marking of evidentiality plays a role ...
Moods are usually seen as dependent or ‘selected’ by certain verbs that embed sentential complements...
Many languages grammatically mark evidentiality, i.e., the source of information. In assertions, evi...
This dissertation provides an empirically driven, theoretically informed investigation of how speake...
It is fairly standard to assume that a speech act consists of an illocutionary level of meaning, F, ...
This talk is divided into two parts. In the first part of the talk I will present a study that looks...
Languages vary in how they encode and interpret attested information. The present research examined ...
Languages vary in how they encode and interpret attested information. The present research examined ...
Some languages have evidential morphemes, which mark the Speaker\u27s source for the information bei...
Jakobson (1957) bases the analysis of mood on a three-part structure that crucially involves two par...
The paper argues for a view of evidentials as a type of shifter and outlines a theory of reference f...
The dissertation is devoted to the formal mechanisms that govern the use of evidentials, expressions...
The notion of linguistic stance as a non-grammaticalized form of evidentiality is here explored thro...
We present a new experimental paradigm for investigating lexical expressions that convey different s...
The paper focuses on inter-personal aspects of the context in the analysis of evidential and related...
This paper attempts to show that the linguistic or discursive marking of evidentiality plays a role ...
Moods are usually seen as dependent or ‘selected’ by certain verbs that embed sentential complements...
Many languages grammatically mark evidentiality, i.e., the source of information. In assertions, evi...
This dissertation provides an empirically driven, theoretically informed investigation of how speake...
It is fairly standard to assume that a speech act consists of an illocutionary level of meaning, F, ...
This talk is divided into two parts. In the first part of the talk I will present a study that looks...
Languages vary in how they encode and interpret attested information. The present research examined ...
Languages vary in how they encode and interpret attested information. The present research examined ...
Some languages have evidential morphemes, which mark the Speaker\u27s source for the information bei...