In:Evidence for Evidentiality
Edited by Ad Foolen, Helen de Hoop and Gijs Mulder
[Human Cognitive Processing 61] 2018
► pp. v–vi
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This article is available free of charge.
Published online: 19 July 2018
https://doi.org/10.1075/hcp.61.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/hcp.61.toc
Table of contents
Editors and contributors
Preface
Introduction: Evidentiality: How do you know?
Ad Foolen
Helen de Hoop
Gijs Mulder
Part IWhat do we know? Knowledge and evidence
Chapter 1Evidentiality as stance: Event types and speaker roles
Henrik Bergqvist
Chapter 2Factual vs. evidential? The past tense forms of spoken Khalkha Mongolian
Benjamin Brosig
Chapter 3I think and I believe
: Evidential expressions in Dutch
Helen de Hoop
Ad Foolen
Gijs Mulder
Vera van Mulken
Chapter 4
(Yo) creo que as a marker of evidentiality and epistemic modality: Evidence from Twitter
Daniel Mulder
Chapter 5Finnish evidential adverbs in argumentative texts
Minna Jaakola
Part IIWhen do we know? Accessibility of evidence in time
Chapter 6Uralic perspectives on experimental evidence for evidentials: Early interpretation of the Estonian evidential morpheme
Anne Tamm
Reili Argus
Kadri Suurmäe
Chapter 7Reportive sollen in an exclusively functional view of evidentiality
Jeroen Vanderbiesen
Chapter 8The French future: Evidentiality and incremental information
Alda Mari
Chapter 9Evidence for the development of ‘evidentiality’ as a grammatical category in Tibetan
Bettina Zeisler
Chapter 10From similarity to evidentiality: Uncertain visual/perceptual evidentiality in Yurakaré and other languages
Sonja Gipper
Chapter 11What do different methods of data collection reveal about evidentiality?
Seppo Kittilä
Lotta Javala
Erika Sandman
Author index
Subject index
Language index
