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This volume explores phenomena which come under the heading of
epistemic modalities and evidentiality in more or less well-known
languages (Germanic, Romance, Balto-Slavic, Hungarian, Tibetan,
Lakandon and Yucatec Maya, Arwak-Chibchan Kogi and Ika). It reveals
cross-linguistic variations in the structuring of these vast fields
of enquiry and clearly demonstrates the relevance and interplay of
multiple factors involved in the analysis of these two conceptual
domains. Although the contributions present diverging descriptive
traditions, they are nonetheless within the broad domain of
functional-typological linguistics and give access to distinct yet
comparable approaches. They all converge around a number of key
issues: modal verbs; the relationship between epistemic modality
and evidentiality; the relationship of modal notions with some
tense and aspect notions; the notions of (inter)subjectivity,
commitment and (dis)engagement; the prosodic variation of modal
adverbs, the diachronic connections between negation and evidential
markers, the connection with mirativity. The volume is of interest
to linguists and advanced graduate students working in general and
theoretical linguistics, semantics, pragmatics, cognition, and
typology.
This volume explores phenomena which come under the heading of
epistemic modalities and evidentiality in more or less well-known
languages (Germanic, Romance, Balto-Slavic, Hungarian, Tibetan,
Lakandon and Yucatec Maya, Arwak-Chibchan Kogi and Ika). It reveals
cross-linguistic variations in the structuring of these vast fields
of enquiry and clearly demonstrates the relevance and interplay of
multiple factors involved in the analysis of these two conceptual
domains. Although the contributions present diverging descriptive
traditions, they are nonetheless within the broad domain of
functional-typological linguistics and give access to distinct yet
comparable approaches. They all converge around a number of key
issues: modal verbs; the relationship between epistemic modality
and evidentiality; the relationship of modal notions with some
tense and aspect notions; the notions of (inter)subjectivity,
commitment and (dis)engagement; the prosodic variation of modal
adverbs, the diachronic connections between negation and evidential
markers, the connection with mirativity. The volume is of interest
to linguists and advanced graduate students working in general and
theoretical linguistics, semantics, pragmatics, cognition, and
typology.
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