TY - CHAP
T1 - Egophoric patterns in Duna verbal morphology
AU - San Roque, Lila
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 John Benjamins Publishing Company.
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - In the language Duna (Trans New Guinea), egophoric distributional patterns are a pervasive characteristic of verbal morphology, but do not comprise a single coherent system. Many morphemes, including evidential markers and future time inflections, show strong tendencies to co-occur with 'informant' subjects (the speaker in a declarative, the addressee in an interrogative), or alternatively with non-informant subjects. The person sensitivity of the Duna forms is observable in frequency, speaker judgments of sayability, and subject implicatures. Egophoric and non-egophoric distributional patterns are motivated by the individual semantics of the morphemes, their perspective-taking properties, and logical and/or conventionalised expectations of how people experience and talk about events. Distributional tendencies can also be flouted, providing a resource for speakers to convey attitudes towards their own knowledge and experiences, or the knowledge and experiences of others.
AB - In the language Duna (Trans New Guinea), egophoric distributional patterns are a pervasive characteristic of verbal morphology, but do not comprise a single coherent system. Many morphemes, including evidential markers and future time inflections, show strong tendencies to co-occur with 'informant' subjects (the speaker in a declarative, the addressee in an interrogative), or alternatively with non-informant subjects. The person sensitivity of the Duna forms is observable in frequency, speaker judgments of sayability, and subject implicatures. Egophoric and non-egophoric distributional patterns are motivated by the individual semantics of the morphemes, their perspective-taking properties, and logical and/or conventionalised expectations of how people experience and talk about events. Distributional tendencies can also be flouted, providing a resource for speakers to convey attitudes towards their own knowledge and experiences, or the knowledge and experiences of others.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85064056651
U2 - 10.1075/tsl.118.13san
DO - 10.1075/tsl.118.13san
M3 - Chapter
AN - SCOPUS:85064056651
SN - 9789027206992
T3 - Typological Studies in Language
SP - 405
EP - 436
BT - Egophoricity
A2 - Floyd, Simeon
A2 - Norcliffe, Elisabeth
A2 - San Roque, Lila
PB - John Benjamins Publishing Company
CY - Amsterdam/Philadelphia
ER -