Article published In: Pragmatics and Society
Vol. 15:2 (2024) ► pp.275–294
Common ground management via evidential markers in Turkish
Published online: 10 May 2023
https://doi.org/10.1075/ps.21058.kur
https://doi.org/10.1075/ps.21058.kur
Abstract
This paper is a reanalysis of the Turkish evidential markers as Common Ground management tools. Based on
conversational data from Turkish National Corpus and a real-life example from the media, I demonstrate how the traditional
description of these markers fails to account for their dialogic uses. The data presented in this paper show that Turkish speakers
alternate between these markers in order to mark their epistemic relation to the utterance content relative to their addressee.
The relevant pragmatic notions marked with the Turkish evidential system are asymmetric and symmetric epistemic relation of the
speaker and addressee, resulting in the speaker’s evaluation of epistemic primacy and shared information, respectively. Turkish
also has another symmetric position where the speaker abstains from primacy claim without specifying the addressee’s epistemic
relation. These observations lead to the conclusion that Turkish evidentiality is in fact an intersubjective epistemic category in
the pragmatic component of language where intersubjectivity is defined as the speaker’s evaluation of the interlocutors’
differential perspectives.
Article outline
- Introduction
- 1.Epistemic primacy and common ground (management)
- 2.Evidentiality in Turkish
- 3.CG Management in Turkish
- 3.1Data and methodology
- 3.2Epistemic primacy via -mIş/ -DI alternation
- 3.3Common ground management with -mIştI
- 4.Conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
References
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Cited by (1)
Cited by one other publication
Spets, Silja-Maija
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