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such forms, they have the option of doubly marking the perfect -
mIş, resulting in the verb form
yapmışmış. These forms are marked as non-confirmative ([-
CONFIRMATIVE
])
and therefore
always express non-firsthand information source or admirativity.
While evidentiality, or evidential-like phenomena are usually considered a defining part
of the Balkan Sprachbund, similar expressions of evidentiality and related meanings are found
throughout much of Eurasia. Haarmann, for example, proposed a Eurasian
isogloss characterized
by an “indirect experience-form” that encompassed Turkic, Mongolic, Tungusic, Uralic, and
some Caucasian and Paleo-Siberian languages (1970). Friedman (1979) provided a more
detailed and theoretical account, focusing on Balkan Slavic, Albanian, Azerbaijani, Turkish,
Georgian, Tajik, and Avar. Comrie (2000, 1-2) also noted this areal phenomenon,
noting that
evidentiality in Eurasia (encompassing Turkic, Tungusic, Iranian, eastern Uralic, Balkan, and
Caucasian languages) lacks some of the characteristics associated with evidential systems
elsewhere, such as fine-tuned distinctions based on source of information. He further notes that
language contact may have played a role in spreading evidentiality among these languages. And
Aikhenvald (2004, 290) identifies a larger area within Eurasia characterized by a small evidential
system located within a “largish ‘evidentiality belt’” spreading across the Balkans, the Caucasus,
and Central Asia into Siberia. She and others have suggested that the influence of the Turkic
langauges is responsible for the spread of this feature. Kehayov (2008) broke down this larger
evidentiality belt into four regions: the Balkans,
the eastern Baltic, the Caucasus, and the Volga-
Kama area, while acknowledging that more work is needed on Siberia and Central Asia.
It is difficult to precisely define the borders of the Eurasian evidentiality belt, in part
because languages at the periphery often display only some of the characteristic features and
because many languages within this belt are poorly documented, especially in regard to
25
evidentiality. In Western Eurasia, the borders of the belt are roughly co-terminous with regions
where Turkic languages are or
have been spoken; in the east, poor documentation of evidentiality
in Mongolic and Tungusic leave it unclear whether it is only Turkic that has spread evidentiality,
or whether it is an Altaic feature.
A number of South Asian languages have grammaticalized evidentiality (Bashir 2006);
this may represent the influence of Turkic on these languages, or it may be an independent
development, possibly influenced by Tibetan. While evidentiality in Tibetan has been well-
studied, the type of evidentiality found in Tibetan and in a number of neighboring languages is
quite different from that of the rest of this belt. In Tibetan, the expression of evidentiality (and
related notions, such as admirativity) is closely tied to the expression
of person and volitionality
(DeLancey 2001). Turkic languages spoken in this Tibetan region, such as Western Yugur, are
no longer typified by the characteristics described above for the Eurasian belt but base their
expression of evidentiality in the Tibetan formula (Roos 2000).
Although Kehayov includes the Baltics in his version of the Eurasian belt, the expression
of evidentiality in these languages also differs from the rest of Eurasia. In the three Baltic
languages considered by Kehayov (2008), Estonian, Lithuanian,
and Latvian, evidentiality and
related notions are expressed by either the present participle or by an infinitive, rather than by a
past-tense-denoting form similar to Turkish -
mIş or Uzbek -
gan. Furthermore, there exists a
large distance between the Baltics and the rest of the Eurasian evidentiality belt. This suggests
that the Baltics should be considered only marginal in this belt. While it is possible (and, in fact,
quite likely) that the original languages of this gap between the Baltics and the rest of the
Eurasian belt had some means of expressing evidentiality, this region
is now almost exclusively
26
Russian-speaking. It is important to bear in mind that the spread of Russian has left large gaps in
what may have once been a larger belt.
Keeping in mind these many gaps, I present in Figure 1 a rough approximation of the belt
and its aproximate
borders, with special reference to the languages and regions mentioned in the
text.
Figure 1: The Eurasian Evidentiality Belt
Of particular interest for further study is the northeastern edge. Little has been written on
evidentiality in the Mongolic or Tungusic languages; so it is difficult to
precisely determine the
eastern edge of the belt. Although, as I show below, the status of Altaic as a valid family is
27
dubious, the further study of evidentiality in Mongolic and Tungusic would greatly enrich our
knowledge of Altaic as a Sprachbund.
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