6.2.2 Theoretical Implications
Many of the claims made in this dissertation are similar to those made for similar phenomena in
other languages. In many ways, the expression of evidentiality and related meanings in Uzbek
and Kazakh is similar to the expression of the same in Turkish, Azerbaijani, Georgian, Lak,
Albanian, and Macedonian (see Friedman 1978; 1988). Perhaps the most important conclusion
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that may be drawn in comparing all of these languages is that
EVIDENTIALITY
is not a category,
per se, but rather a possible interpretation of
NON
-
CONFIRMATIVITY
.
In typological works on evidentiality (such as Aikhenvald and Dixon 2003;Aikhenvald
2004) the Turkic languages, Macedonian, Bulgarian, Georgian, and other Eurasian languages are
considered to possess grammatical evidentiality. Works on Balkan and Caucasian languages
(Darden 1977; Friedman 1977; 1978; 1988) have shown that an analysis involving (non-)
confirmativity better accounts for the wide range of meanings expressed by so-called
“evidential” morphemes. The analysis of Uzbek and Kazakh presented here also supports the
non-confirmative analysis, and the brief examination of other Central Asian languages in the
previous sections suggests that a non-confirmative analysis may apply to them as well.
Aronson (1991), among others, has claimed that he knows of no language that possesses
evidentiality as a grammatical category, and he only tentatively preserves it in his restructuring
of Jakobson’s (1957/1971) verbal categories. The languages discussed in this work, and many of
the other languages referred to, exhibit evidential meaning only as a result of the expression of
non-confirmativity, which falls into Jakobson’s category of
STATUS
. It is, in fact, the expression
of evidential meaning via non-confirmativity that is one of the hallmarks of the Eurasian
evidentiality belt. Outside of this belt, many languages have been claimed to possess an
evidential category, yet it is still somewhat rare for these languages to be examined with a non-
confirmative analysis in mind, so it is still unknown how widespread the association between
non-confirmativity and evidential meaning is.
In further examining evidentiality in other languages, we expect that one of three possible
conditions will hold true: that the expression of evidentiality is dependent upon the expression of
non-confirmativity or some related sub-category; that evidentiality is epiphenomenal, and may
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be expressed via several different media; or that evidentiality does, in fact, exist in as a category
in some, but not all of the languages for which an evidential category has been claimed.
Outside of certain schools of linguistics, there exists little work on (non-)confirmativity
as a subtype of either
STATUS
or
MODALITY
. There does exist, however, a fairly recent body of
work concerning subjective modality, particularly as it is expressed by English auxiliary verbs
(Lyons 1977, Verstraete 2001, Papafragou 2006). Although, as explained in the preface, there
are reasons to make distinctions between
STATUS
and
MODALITY
, treating (non-)confirmativity as
a form of subjective
MODALITY
may provide better insight into how this phenomenon functions.
As noted by Verstraete (2001), it is quite difficult to distinguish the subjective and objective
interpretations of English modal verbs. If we treat the various (non-)confirmative morphemes in
Uzbek and Kazakh (and other languages) as expressions of subjective
MODALITY
, we have access
to canonical forms with unequivocally subjective interpretations.
In Chapter 5, I discuss the emotive function of language as described by Jakobson (1960)
in reference to admiratives and rhetorical questions. Other functions of language are associated
with certain types of utterances, namely, the
REFERENTIAL
function with declaratives, and the
CONATIVE
with imperatives. What I have proposed is that admiratives and rhetorical questions
be seen as examples of language being employed in its emotive function. I further include
exclamatives, which function quite similarly to admiratives, in emotive class of utterances (see
Andueza and Gutiérrez-Rexach 2010). The properties of exclamatives are well-known, yet it is
still somewhat rare for utterances not exhibiting canonical exclamative morphosyntax to be
included in a broader class of exclamative-like constructions. Following Zanuttini and Portner
(2003), I propose that there exists a broad class of emotive utterances that includes exclamatives,
admiratives, and rhetorical questions. Each of these types of utterances possesses unique
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properties that vary language to language, yet by examining them as a class, we may gain insight
into the emotive function of language.
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