75
(74)
Kolumb 1492 12 oktyabr-da kichkina bir orol-ga chiq-ib qol-di. (Uz)
Columbus 1492 12 October-
LOC
small a island-
DAT
go.out-
CVB PFV
-
PST
‘Columbus landed on a small island on October 12, 1492.’
(Raun 1969:50)
In neither Uzbek nor Kazakh, however, does definitness outrank confirmativity, as events
that the speaker is unwilling to confirm are never placed in the simple past -
di/ -DI. Because
historic events such as those in the examples involving Columbus are well-known facts, the
speaker is unlikely to be perceived as immodest or impolite by confirming them. Even if large
amounts of detail are included, events that the speaker is unwilling to confirm never employ the
simple past tense and instead require a marked non-confirmative form.
What is important to keep in mind in considering the competition between confirmativity,
definitness, and distance is that while the perfect -
gan/-GAn is marked as indefinite and distant
(in Uzbek), it is not marked for confirmativity. This means that the only time positive
confirmativity can outrank definiteness or distance is when the speaker wishes to emphasize
confirmativity over all other factors. The presence of the perfect in this competition means that
while confirmativity outranks definitness and distance, indefinite and distant meanings may still
surface because they do not compete with confirmativity when the perfect form surfaces. The
following tables summarize the relationships established so far between confirmativity,
definiteness, and distance in Uzbek and Kazakh.
Table 25: Past and Perfect in Uzbek and Kazakh
Yüklə
Dostları ilə paylaş: