Cover not available

Review published In: Review of Cognitive Linguistics
Vol. 8:1 (2010) ► pp.228232

Get fulltext from our e-platform
References (14)
References
Aikhenvald, A. Y. (2004). Evidentiality. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Barcelona, A. (2000) (ed.). Metaphor and Metonymy at the Crossroads. A Cognitive Perspective. Berlin/New York: Mouton de Gruyter.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Chafe, W. L. (1986). Evidentiality in English conversation and academic writing. In W. Chafe and J. Nichols (eds.), Evidentiality: The Linguistic Coding of Epistemology (pp. 46–59). Norwood, N J: Ablex.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
de Haan, F. (1999). Evidentiality and epistemic modality: Setting boundaries. Southwest Journal of Linguistics, 18(1), 83–101.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Langacker, R. (2000). Grammar and Conceptualization. Berlin/New York: Mouton de Gruyter.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Palmer, F. R. (1990). Modality and the English Modals. Second edition. London: Longman.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Talmy, L. (1988). The relation of grammar to cognition. In B. Rudzka-Ostyn (ed.), Topics in Cognitive Linguistics (pp. 165–205). Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Traugott, E. C. & Dasher, R. (2002). Regularity in Semantic Change. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Traugott, E. C. (1997). Subjectification and the development of epistemic meaning: The case of promise and threaten . In T. Swan & O. J. Westvik (eds.), Modality in Germanic languages. Historical and comparative perspectives (pp. 185–210). Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Verhagen, A. (1995). Subjectification, syntax, and communication. In D. Stein and S. Wright (eds.), Subjectivity and Subjectivisaion in Language (pp. 102–128). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
(1996). Sequential conceptualization and linear order. In E. Casad (ed.), Cognitive Linguistics in the Redwoods: The Expansion of a New Paradigm in Linguistics (pp. 793–817). Berlin/New York: Mouton de Gruyter.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
(2000). ‘The girl that promised to become something’: An exploration into dia-chronic subjectification in Dutch. In T. F. Shannon & J. P. Snapper (eds.), The Berkeley Conference on Dutch Linguistics 1997: the Dutch Language at the Milennium (pp. 197–208). Lanham MD: University Press of America.Google Scholar logo with link to Google Scholar
Mobile Menu Logo with link to supplementary files background Layer 1 prag Twitter_Logo_Blue