In:Information-Structural Perspectives on Discourse Particles
Edited by Pierre-Yves Modicom and Olivier Duplâtre
[Studies in Language Companion Series 213] 2020
► pp. 251–276
Chapter 10The discourse marker hani in Turkish
Published online: 4 March 2020
https://doi.org/10.1075/slcs.213.10aka
https://doi.org/10.1075/slcs.213.10aka
Abstract
This study is dedicated to the Turkish discourse
marker hani, which exhibits three kinds of use. It
appears in interrogative sentences with a wh-question intonation. In
these cases, the use of hani indicates that the
context provides counter evidence for the belief /expectations of
the speaker and the speaker demands an account for it from the
hearer. Hani also appears at the beginning of
clauses ending with the particle ya. Those
utterances are questions demanding an answer from the hearer and
reminding the speaker’s belief or expectation, which the hearer is
expected to corroborate. Finally, hani can appear
in declarative clauses expressing the same value of reminding the
hearer of a belief of the speaker. The common core of all three uses
is the notion of shared knowledge: hani is used for the sake of
Common Ground management. Drawing on previous research on negative
polar questions as well as inner negation and outer negation in
questions, we show that utterances including hani
with wh-question intonation involve a negation and a question
operator and show an “inner negation” reading. Hani…
ya utterances are compatible with the outer negation
reading of negative polar questions and demand neutral contexts or
positive evidence. Declarative hani is incompatible
with contexts that provide negative evidence, but felicitous in
neutral and positive contexts.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Previous research on hani
- 3.Negated polar questions
- 4.Negative polar questions and hani
constructions
- 4.1Hani constructions with wh-intonation
- 4.2Hani constructions with the particle ya
- 4.3Hani constructions with declarative intonation
- 5.The difference between hani constructions and negative polar questions
- 6.Concluding remarks
Notes List of abbreviations References
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