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participles and past tenses derived from *
–MIš are still employed in Uzbek and Kazakh, they are
very rare. The only remnants of this form are in a few lexicalized items, such as
Uzbek
kelmish
‘future’ and Kazakh
emis-emis ‘gossip’.
In Uzbek, -
mish is occasionally found as copular
emish,
where it bears essentially the same evidential meaning as
ekan, but with a strong meaning of
reportedness. The Kazakh cognate
*emis has turned into a clitic -
mIs,
which likewise expresses
reportedness. In neither language may any cognate of -
MIš attach to a bare verb stem. The exact
uses and meanings of these forms are discussed in the following chapters.
The addition of the converbial past
–(i)b/-
(i)p to the past tense paradigm, and its
association
with non-confirmative meaning, has complicated the past tense paradigm by
introducing a marked non-confirmative simple (i.e. non-copular) past term. Whereas -
mIş in
Turkish may be employed in non-confirmative contexts, in Uzbek and Kazakh, the converbial
past usually takes precedence over the perfect with
regard to non-confirmativity, and the perfect
-
GAn is only employed once the non-confirmativity of the context has been established.
The precedence of the converbial past in non-confirmative contexts is illustrative of the
competition between the meanings borne by the past tenses. C
ONFIRMATIVITY
is the most
marked meaning, and past tenses marked as confirmative or non-confirmative take precedence
when those meanings are expressed. D
EFINITENESS
is the next most highly ranked meaning, and,
in Uzbek, when appropriate, temporal
DISTANCE
may be employed
when distinguishing events
marked by the past or the perfect. The ranking of the prominence of these meanings may be
summarized as:
C
ONFIRMATIVITY
>
D
EFINITENESS
>
(D
ISTANCE
)
When in copular past is present, its confirmative meaning overrides any competing meaning
borne by the non-finite inflections that it occurs with. Likewise, the marked non-confirmative
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meaning borne by the copular form of the perfect (Uz:
ekan, Kaz:
eken)
overrides any competing
meaning marked on lower parts of the predicate. The evidential properties of
ekan/eken are the
topic of Chapter 4.