This edited volume brings together work on the evidential systems of Tibetan languages. This includes diachronic research, synchronic description of systems in individual Tibetan varieties and papers addressing broader theoretical or typological questions. Evidentiality in Tibetan languages interacts with other features of modality, interactional context and speaker knowledge states in ways that provide important perspectives for typologists and our general understanding of evidential systems. This book provides the first sustained attempt to capture this complexity and diversity from both a synchronic and diachronic perspective
A diachronic study of the development of modern aspect and evidential morphology in standard Lhasa T...
Proceedings of the Eleventh Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society (1985), pp. 65-7
The Qiang language is spoken by about 70,000 (out of 200,000) Qiang people, plus 50,000 people class...
This paper describes the specific contexts in which evidentials may be used in Lhasa Tibetan. I firs...
The Tibetan evidential system seems to defy systematic analysis. Each evidential category comprises ...
Evidentiality is a grammatical category which has source of\ud information as its primary meaning — ...
Evidentiality is a grammatical category which has source of information as its primary meaning — whe...
Classifications of evidentiality all include at least one ‘reported’, ‘quotative’ or ‘hearsay’ categ...
We describe the nature of the evidential system in Tibetan and consider the challenges that any evid...
In my dissertation, I have studied one of the yet non-described parts of the grammar of spoken Stand...
The main purpose of this paper is to elucidate a special type of egophoric markers found in Purik an...
This paper focuses on a specific type of perspective-indexing constructions in Tibetic and neighbori...
In my dissertation, I have studied one of the yet non-described parts of the grammar of spoken Stand...
A speaker may conceptualise and represent a situation from three different ‘perspectives’: epistemic...
The Tibetan language comprises a wide range of spoken and written varieties whose known history date...
A diachronic study of the development of modern aspect and evidential morphology in standard Lhasa T...
Proceedings of the Eleventh Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society (1985), pp. 65-7
The Qiang language is spoken by about 70,000 (out of 200,000) Qiang people, plus 50,000 people class...
This paper describes the specific contexts in which evidentials may be used in Lhasa Tibetan. I firs...
The Tibetan evidential system seems to defy systematic analysis. Each evidential category comprises ...
Evidentiality is a grammatical category which has source of\ud information as its primary meaning — ...
Evidentiality is a grammatical category which has source of information as its primary meaning — whe...
Classifications of evidentiality all include at least one ‘reported’, ‘quotative’ or ‘hearsay’ categ...
We describe the nature of the evidential system in Tibetan and consider the challenges that any evid...
In my dissertation, I have studied one of the yet non-described parts of the grammar of spoken Stand...
The main purpose of this paper is to elucidate a special type of egophoric markers found in Purik an...
This paper focuses on a specific type of perspective-indexing constructions in Tibetic and neighbori...
In my dissertation, I have studied one of the yet non-described parts of the grammar of spoken Stand...
A speaker may conceptualise and represent a situation from three different ‘perspectives’: epistemic...
The Tibetan language comprises a wide range of spoken and written varieties whose known history date...
A diachronic study of the development of modern aspect and evidential morphology in standard Lhasa T...
Proceedings of the Eleventh Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society (1985), pp. 65-7
The Qiang language is spoken by about 70,000 (out of 200,000) Qiang people, plus 50,000 people class...