Title: Evidential Implicatures in Cuzco Quechua
1Evidential Implicatures in Cuzco Quechua
- MPI lunch talk
- Martina Faller, MPI KUN
2Overview
- Background on evidentiality
- Quechua evidentials and their implicatures
- Levinsons heuristics for calculating generalized
conversational implicatures - How to calculate evidential implicatures
- Proposal evidential heuristics
- Implications for the Theory of GCIs
3Quechua
- Quechua is a language family spoken throughout
the Andes by approximately 8 million people
(Lefebvre Muysken 1988) - Data used in Faller (2002) collected in Cusco,
Peru. Peru has around 4 million Quechua speakers
(Cerrón-Palomino 1987) - Quechua is an agglutinative language
4Evidentiality
- the encoding of the speakers grounds for making
a speech act - in assertions speakers type of source of
information - an evidential is a grammatical marker of
evidentiality
5Three main types of Evidentiality
- Direct evidence
- Reportative evidence
- Inferential evidence
-
Willett (1988)
6Epistemic Modality
- The encoding of the speakers judgment of a
proposition as true or false with a certain
degree of certainty. - English epistemic modals must, may
7Epistemic Modality Evidentiality Overlap
Epistemic Modality Possibility
Necessity
Epistemic Modality Possibility
Necessity
Inference
Report Direct
Evidentiality
Based on Auwera and Plungian (1998)
8Quechua evidential paradigm
- Para-sha-n
- rain-prog-3
- It is raining.
No evidential
9Quechua evidentials as illocutionary modifiers
- Any assertion has the sincerity condition that
the speaker believes p - Quechua evidentials add a sincerity condition
specifying how the speaker came to believe p
10Quechua evidentials as illocutionary modifiers
- Para-sha-n.
- rain-prog-3
- pIt is raining.
- Sinc Bel(p)
- Para-sha-n-mi.
- rain-prog-3
- pIt is raining.
- Sinc Bel(p), Dir(p)
11Two types of evidential implicatures
- I. Absence of evidential
- Para-sha-n
- rain-prog-3
- It is raining. gt Direct evidence
II. Presence of indirect evidential Para-sha-n-si
/-chá rain-prog-3 It is raining. gt
Direct evidence
12Generalized Conversational Implicatures
- GCIs increase the informativeness of the
coded/entailed content of a sentence in a
predictable and regular way from the structure
of utterances, given the structure of the
language, and not by virtue of the particular
contexts of utterance (Levinson 2000).
13Generalized Conversational Implicatures
- In contrast to the coded meaning, GCIs are only
preferred interpretations, which in certain
circumstances can be cancelled or blocked.
14The Q-Heuristic
- What is saliently not said, is not the case.
- The Q-heuristic is related to Grices first maxim
of Quantity Make your contribution as
informative as required (for the current purposes
of the exchange)
15The Q-Heuristic
- operates on paradigmatic expressions, which can
be ordered according to degree of
informativeness - lt Strong, Weak gt
16The Q-Heuristic
- Example lt all, some gt
- (a) All tigers are fierce.
- (b) Some tigers are fierce.
- (a) is more informative than (b), because (a)
entails (b)
17The Q-Heuristic
- What is saliently not said is not the case
- lt all, some gt
- Some tigers are fierce.
- Qgt not all tigers are fierce.
-
18The I-Heuristic
- Unmarked, minimal expressions warrant
interpretations to the stereotypical extensions. - related to Grices second Maxim of Quantity Do
not make your contribution more informative than
required.
19The I-Heuristic
- I-implicatures enrich/narrow/strengthen what is
said - Example
- boxer Igt male boxer
20The M-Heuristic
- Marked message indicates marked situation.
- relates to Grices Maxim of Manner
- Be perspicous
- Example
- (a) Bill stopped the car. Igt
normally - (b) Bill caused the car to stop.
Mgt not normally
21Maxim of Quality
- Quality I Do not say what you believe to be
false - Quality II Do not say that for which you lack
adequate evidence
22Maxim of Quality
- Levinson does not propose any heuristics relating
to the Maxim of Quality - The maxim of quality is mainly appealed to for
implicatures that arise from flouting it - A Tehran's in Turkey, isn't it, teacher?
- B And London's in Armenia, I suppose.
23Implicating Direct Evidence
- Absence of evidential
- Para-sha-n
- rain-prog-3
- It is raining. gt Direct evidence
- Is the DE-implicature a GCI?
24Implicating Direct Evidence
- Direct evidence implicature can be overridden by
context - ...triciclu-n-ta-qa tari-ra-ka-pu-n.
- ...tricycle-3-acc-top find-hort-rfl-ben-3
- ...they found his tricycle.
25Implicating Direct Evidence
- A sentence can only have a single evidential
value. - If evidential-less sentences encoded the value
direct, it should be impossible to add an
indirect evidential. - Para-sha-n-si/-chá
- rain-prog-3
- It is raining.
26Implicating Direct Evidence
- GCIs usually can be cancelled overtly
- Some tigers are fierce, in fact all of them
are. - the DE-implicature cannot be cancelled.
- Para-sha-n, ichaqa mana riku-ni-chu
- rain-prog-3 but not see-1-neg
- It is raining, but I did not see (it).
- This is not surprising, however, since the
DE-implicature is illocutionary
27Which heuristic is responsible for the
DE-implicature?
- Q-heuristic operates on overt linguistic
expressions. - The M-heuristic operates on marked expressions
evidential-less sentences are not marked. - Therefore, neither Q nor M can be responsible
28Which heuristic is responsible for the
DE-implicature?
- The DE-implicature does narrow/strengthen what is
said so, is it an I-implicature? - But reportative or conjectural evidence would
also be potential enrichments.
29Which heuristic is responsible for the
DE-implicature?
- Principle of Informativeness if an utterance
has competing interpretations, the best one is
the most informative one (Atlas and Levinson
1981). - Is direct evidence more informative than
reportative or conjectural? - Not if informativeness is defined as entailment
30Calculating the DE-implicature
- Direct evidence is stronger than indirect
evidence. - Addressee can assume that speaker bases an
assertion on the strongest type of evidence
available to him or her. - If no type of evidence is overtly expressed,
direct evidence is implicated.
31Implicating absence of DE
- Indirect evidentials implicate the absence of
direct evidence - Para-sha-n-si/-chá
- rain-prog-3
- It is raining. gt Direct evidence
- The DE-implicature arises in other languages
with evidentials (de Haan 1998)
32Implicating absence of DE
- De Haan DE implicature is calculated on the
basis of a universal evidential hierarchy - Direct gt Inferential gt Reportative
- Ordering criterion speaker preference
- Is the DE implicature a Q-implicature?
33Implicating the absence of DE
- De Haans hierarchy is not valid for Quechua.
Instead - Direct -mi gt Reportative -si
- Direct -mi gt Conjectural -chá
- If the DE implicature is a Q-implicature, then
sentences with -mi should entail the same
sentences with -si or -chá
34Implicating the absence of DE
- Para-sha-n-mi.
- rain-prog-3
- pIt is raining.
- Sinc Bel(p), Dir(p)
- Para-sha-n-si.
- rain-prog-3
- pIt is raining.
- Sinc Bel(p), Rep(p)
- Trivially, a sentence S with -mi entails S with
-si but also vice versa. - Moreover, this entailment relation does not
include the evidential value
35Implicating the absence of DE
- Para-sha-n-mi.
- rain-prog-3
- pIt is raining.
- Sinc Bel(p), Dir(p)
- Para-sha-n-si.
- rain-prog-3
- pIt is raining.
- Sinc Bel(p), Rep(p)
- Relevant notion is illocutionary entailment
speech act A entails B, if A cannot be performed
without also performing B (Vanderveken 1990).
36Implicating the absence of DE
- Para-sha-n-mi.
- rain-prog-3
- pIt is raining.
- Sinc Bel(p), Dir(p)
- Para-sha-n-si.
- rain-prog-3
- pIt is raining.
- Sinc Bel(p), Rep(p)
- The sentence with -mi does not illocutionary
entail the sentence with -si or -chá
37Implicating the absence of DE
- The evidential scales are not ordered in terms of
informativeness. - The DE-implicature is not a Q-implicature.
- Again, the revelant notion is
- strength of evidence
38Proposal Evidential Heuristics
- Both the DE- and the DE-implicature are arise
because direct evidence is stronger than
reportative or conjectural evidence. - They exploit Grices second Maxim of Quality Do
not say that for which you lack adequate
evidence.
39Proposal Evidential Heuristics
- E(vidential-)S(trength)-Heuristic
- Saliently not indicated types of evidence are
not available to the speaker - This heuristic operates on paradigms ordered by
degree of strength of evidence - Direct -mi gt Reportative -si
- Direct -mi gt Conjectural -chá
40Proposal Evidential Heuristics
- E(vidential-)S(trength)-Heuristic
- Saliently not indicated types of evidence are
not available to the speaker - Para-sha-n-si/-chá
- rain-prog-3
- It is raining. gt Direct evidence
41Proposal Evidential Heuristics
- E(vidential-)E(nrichment)-Heuristic
- Unmarked, minimal expressions warrant
interpretations to the evidentially
richest/strongest extension. - Para-sha-n.
- rain-prog-3
- It is raining. gt Direct evidence
42Implications for Theory of GCIs
- The EE-implicature is not universal
- It is raining.
- does not implicate that the speaker saw it rain.
43Implications for Theory of GCIs
- EE-implicature hypothesis
- evidential zero marking only gives rise to the
DE-implicature in languages that encode
evidentiality paradigmatically.
44Implications for Theory of GCIs
- Generalized Zero-marking-implicature hypothesis
- a. Zero marking implicates a value for feature X
just in case there is a linguistic paradigm
encoding the values of X. - b. Given a linguistc paradigm for X, zero
marking implicates the super value of X.
45Implications for Theory of GCIs
- Levinsons heuristics all operate on the
propositional content of an utterance. - Quantity and Manner maxims relate to information
- The evidential heuristics operate on the
illocutionary level of an utterance - Quality maxims relate to sincerity
46Implications for Theory of GCIs
- A chicken and egg problem?
- Do languages have certain morphosyntactic devices
because their speakers adhere to the related
heuristic, or - Do speakes adhere to certain heuristics, because
they happen to have the morphosyntactic devices?