Inferred Propositions and the Expression of the Evidence Relation in Natural Language: Evidentiality in Central Alaskan Yup'ik Eskimo and English

Ph.D. Evidentiality has usually been defined as the grammaticalized expression of a speaker's evidence source for a proposition, where evidence is conceptualized as a speaker's source-type for a particular proposition (Aikhenvald 2004). How this evidence source-type and the evidential are...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Krawczyk, Elizabeth Allyn
Other Authors: Portner, Paul
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Georgetown University 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10822/557713
id ftgeorgetownuniv:oai:repository.library.georgetown.edu:10822/557713
record_format openpolar
spelling ftgeorgetownuniv:oai:repository.library.georgetown.edu:10822/557713 2023-10-09T21:51:13+02:00 Inferred Propositions and the Expression of the Evidence Relation in Natural Language: Evidentiality in Central Alaskan Yup'ik Eskimo and English Krawczyk, Elizabeth Allyn Portner, Paul 2012 PDF 324 leaves http://hdl.handle.net/10822/557713 en eng Georgetown University APT-BAG: georgetown.edu.10822_557713.tar;APT-ETAG: 389496c5eb4c5f9dd5ab1fbfd87dc806 http://hdl.handle.net/10822/557713 Georgetown University-Graduate School of Arts & Sciences Linguistics Linguistics thesis 2012 ftgeorgetownuniv 2023-09-12T22:04:47Z Ph.D. Evidentiality has usually been defined as the grammaticalized expression of a speaker's evidence source for a proposition, where evidence is conceptualized as a speaker's source-type for a particular proposition (Aikhenvald 2004). How this evidence source-type and the evidential are related has yet to be formally modeled in the formal semantics literature. In fact, defining evidence has been considered a problem not relevant to linguistics (Faller 2002). In most cases, what is meant by the term evidence is never even discussed. If it were the case that evidentials exhibited regular behavior, only marking those propositions learned by whichever the particular type of evidence that it is considered to express, then the semantics of evidentials would not require further discussion. Things are not this simple, however, as there are a number of cases of evidence-evidential mismatch, where an evidential is used felicitously in spite of the fact that the speaker does not possess the correct evidence source-type (Faller 2002; Krawczyk 2009, 2010). The source-type description of evidentials does not reflect the facts, and only describes the basic, typical cases. Oversimplification of the evidential signal as source-type obscures interesting facts about evidentials and evidence. The goal of this dissertation is two-fold. The first is to provide a more thorough discussion of what it means to be evidence for evidentials; the second is to illustrate how a model of evidence can capture the semantics and pragmatics of evidentials. I formalize the notion of evidence relevant to evidentials as an evidence relation, an abductive inference to the best-fit explanation given what one observes, and propose that evidentials mark those propositions that are the best-fit explanation for the speaker's observation. I use original data from Central Alaskan Yup'ik Eskimo and English, as well as data from other publications, to illustrate how the evidence relation and best-fit explanation proposal can account for both the ... Thesis eskimo* Yup'ik Georgetown University: DigitalGeorgetown
institution Open Polar
collection Georgetown University: DigitalGeorgetown
op_collection_id ftgeorgetownuniv
language English
topic Linguistics
spellingShingle Linguistics
Krawczyk, Elizabeth Allyn
Inferred Propositions and the Expression of the Evidence Relation in Natural Language: Evidentiality in Central Alaskan Yup'ik Eskimo and English
topic_facet Linguistics
description Ph.D. Evidentiality has usually been defined as the grammaticalized expression of a speaker's evidence source for a proposition, where evidence is conceptualized as a speaker's source-type for a particular proposition (Aikhenvald 2004). How this evidence source-type and the evidential are related has yet to be formally modeled in the formal semantics literature. In fact, defining evidence has been considered a problem not relevant to linguistics (Faller 2002). In most cases, what is meant by the term evidence is never even discussed. If it were the case that evidentials exhibited regular behavior, only marking those propositions learned by whichever the particular type of evidence that it is considered to express, then the semantics of evidentials would not require further discussion. Things are not this simple, however, as there are a number of cases of evidence-evidential mismatch, where an evidential is used felicitously in spite of the fact that the speaker does not possess the correct evidence source-type (Faller 2002; Krawczyk 2009, 2010). The source-type description of evidentials does not reflect the facts, and only describes the basic, typical cases. Oversimplification of the evidential signal as source-type obscures interesting facts about evidentials and evidence. The goal of this dissertation is two-fold. The first is to provide a more thorough discussion of what it means to be evidence for evidentials; the second is to illustrate how a model of evidence can capture the semantics and pragmatics of evidentials. I formalize the notion of evidence relevant to evidentials as an evidence relation, an abductive inference to the best-fit explanation given what one observes, and propose that evidentials mark those propositions that are the best-fit explanation for the speaker's observation. I use original data from Central Alaskan Yup'ik Eskimo and English, as well as data from other publications, to illustrate how the evidence relation and best-fit explanation proposal can account for both the ...
author2 Portner, Paul
format Thesis
author Krawczyk, Elizabeth Allyn
author_facet Krawczyk, Elizabeth Allyn
author_sort Krawczyk, Elizabeth Allyn
title Inferred Propositions and the Expression of the Evidence Relation in Natural Language: Evidentiality in Central Alaskan Yup'ik Eskimo and English
title_short Inferred Propositions and the Expression of the Evidence Relation in Natural Language: Evidentiality in Central Alaskan Yup'ik Eskimo and English
title_full Inferred Propositions and the Expression of the Evidence Relation in Natural Language: Evidentiality in Central Alaskan Yup'ik Eskimo and English
title_fullStr Inferred Propositions and the Expression of the Evidence Relation in Natural Language: Evidentiality in Central Alaskan Yup'ik Eskimo and English
title_full_unstemmed Inferred Propositions and the Expression of the Evidence Relation in Natural Language: Evidentiality in Central Alaskan Yup'ik Eskimo and English
title_sort inferred propositions and the expression of the evidence relation in natural language: evidentiality in central alaskan yup'ik eskimo and english
publisher Georgetown University
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10822/557713
genre eskimo*
Yup'ik
genre_facet eskimo*
Yup'ik
op_source Georgetown University-Graduate School of Arts & Sciences
Linguistics
op_relation APT-BAG: georgetown.edu.10822_557713.tar;APT-ETAG: 389496c5eb4c5f9dd5ab1fbfd87dc806
http://hdl.handle.net/10822/557713
_version_ 1779314321470259200