Understanding of evidentials is incomplete without consideration of their behaviour in interrogative contexts. We discuss key formal, semantic, and pragmatic features of cross-linguistic variation concerning the use of evidential markers in interrogative clauses. Cross-linguistic data suggest that an exclusively speaker-centric view of evidentiality is not sufficient to explain the semantics of information source marking, as in many languages it is typical for evidentials in questions to represent addressee perspective. Comparison of evidentiality and the related phenomenon of egophoricity emphasises how knowledge-based linguistic systems reflect attention to the way knowledge is distributed among participants in the speech situatio
[Extract] Every language has a way of speaking about how one knows what one says, and what one think...
Cross-linguistically prevalent semantic distinctions are widely assumed to be easier to learn, due t...
Evidential markers encode the source of a speaker’s knowledge. While some languages express evidenti...
Understanding of evidentials is incomplete without consideration of their behaviour in interrogative...
The dissertation is devoted to the formal mechanisms that govern the use of evidentials, expressions...
Evidentiality is the implicit citing of a source of evidence. Languages differ in how they treat evi...
Every language has an array of ways of referring to information source: this may be accomplished wit...
The expression of knowledge in language (i.e. epistemicity) consists of a number of distinct notions...
Every language has an array of ways of referring to information source: this may be accomplished wit...
In a number of languages, scattered across the world, every statement must contain a specification o...
Every language has an array of ways of referring to information source. This may be accomplished wit...
Many languages grammatically mark evidentiality, i.e., the source of information. In assertions, evi...
[Extract] Every language has a way of speaking about how one knows what one says, and what one think...
Evidentiality – a grammatical expression of information source (Aikhenvald 2004, 2014a) – is often e...
[Extract] Evidentiality is a grammatical category that has source of information as its primary mean...
[Extract] Every language has a way of speaking about how one knows what one says, and what one think...
Cross-linguistically prevalent semantic distinctions are widely assumed to be easier to learn, due t...
Evidential markers encode the source of a speaker’s knowledge. While some languages express evidenti...
Understanding of evidentials is incomplete without consideration of their behaviour in interrogative...
The dissertation is devoted to the formal mechanisms that govern the use of evidentials, expressions...
Evidentiality is the implicit citing of a source of evidence. Languages differ in how they treat evi...
Every language has an array of ways of referring to information source: this may be accomplished wit...
The expression of knowledge in language (i.e. epistemicity) consists of a number of distinct notions...
Every language has an array of ways of referring to information source: this may be accomplished wit...
In a number of languages, scattered across the world, every statement must contain a specification o...
Every language has an array of ways of referring to information source. This may be accomplished wit...
Many languages grammatically mark evidentiality, i.e., the source of information. In assertions, evi...
[Extract] Every language has a way of speaking about how one knows what one says, and what one think...
Evidentiality – a grammatical expression of information source (Aikhenvald 2004, 2014a) – is often e...
[Extract] Evidentiality is a grammatical category that has source of information as its primary mean...
[Extract] Every language has a way of speaking about how one knows what one says, and what one think...
Cross-linguistically prevalent semantic distinctions are widely assumed to be easier to learn, due t...
Evidential markers encode the source of a speaker’s knowledge. While some languages express evidenti...