Ever since the category of evidentiality has been identified in the verbal grammar of certain languages, it has been assumed that evidentiality plays no role in the grammars of those languages that have not incorporated it into their verb morphology or at least their verb clusters. The present paper attempts to show that even if evidentiality is not visible in the verbal grammar of English and Dutch, it appears to be a motivating factor, both historically and synchronically, in the process whereby evidential predicates are made to play a subordinate syntactic role with regard to their embedded subject clause. This process, known as AUXILIATION (Kuteva, Auxiliation: an enquiry into the nature of grammaticalization, Oxford University Press, 2...
This dissertation addresses a number of phenomena in the semantics and syntax-semantics of evidentia...
The so-called 'raising-to-subject' pattern that verbs of the type believe can occur in is usually tr...
The so-called “raising-to-subject” pattern that verbs of the type believe can occur in is usually tr...
Ever since the category of evidentiality has been identified in the verbal grammar of certain langua...
Evidentiality is the implicit citing of a source of evidence. Languages differ in how they treat evi...
[Extract] Evidentiality is a grammatical category with source of information as its primary meaning-...
Evidentiality – a grammatical expression of information source (Aikhenvald 2004, 2014a) – is often e...
This paper presents a contrastive study of on the one hand, (‘t) schijnt (‘it seems’), a form of the...
Evidentiality is a well-established morphosyntactic category that has also received a lot of attenti...
In some languages, every declarative sentence includes a morpheme specifying the speaker\u27s eviden...
In this corpus-based article we explore the development of evidential meanings in English verbs of a...
Present-day Dutch has two entrenched "grammatical" hearsay evidentials: a construction with zou (ori...
[Extract] Evidentiality is a grammatical category that has source of information as its primary mean...
The dissertation is devoted to the formal mechanisms that govern the use of evidentials, expressions...
In a number of languages, scattered across the world, every statement must contain a specification o...
This dissertation addresses a number of phenomena in the semantics and syntax-semantics of evidentia...
The so-called 'raising-to-subject' pattern that verbs of the type believe can occur in is usually tr...
The so-called “raising-to-subject” pattern that verbs of the type believe can occur in is usually tr...
Ever since the category of evidentiality has been identified in the verbal grammar of certain langua...
Evidentiality is the implicit citing of a source of evidence. Languages differ in how they treat evi...
[Extract] Evidentiality is a grammatical category with source of information as its primary meaning-...
Evidentiality – a grammatical expression of information source (Aikhenvald 2004, 2014a) – is often e...
This paper presents a contrastive study of on the one hand, (‘t) schijnt (‘it seems’), a form of the...
Evidentiality is a well-established morphosyntactic category that has also received a lot of attenti...
In some languages, every declarative sentence includes a morpheme specifying the speaker\u27s eviden...
In this corpus-based article we explore the development of evidential meanings in English verbs of a...
Present-day Dutch has two entrenched "grammatical" hearsay evidentials: a construction with zou (ori...
[Extract] Evidentiality is a grammatical category that has source of information as its primary mean...
The dissertation is devoted to the formal mechanisms that govern the use of evidentials, expressions...
In a number of languages, scattered across the world, every statement must contain a specification o...
This dissertation addresses a number of phenomena in the semantics and syntax-semantics of evidentia...
The so-called 'raising-to-subject' pattern that verbs of the type believe can occur in is usually tr...
The so-called “raising-to-subject” pattern that verbs of the type believe can occur in is usually tr...