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Evidential Implicatures in Cuzco Quechua

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Title: Evidential Implicatures in Cuzco Quechua


1
Evidential Implicatures in Cuzco Quechua
  • MPI lunch talk
  • Martina Faller, MPI KUN

2
Overview
  • 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

3
Quechua
  • 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

4
Evidentiality
  • 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

5
Three main types of Evidentiality
  • Direct evidence
  • Reportative evidence
  • Inferential evidence

Willett (1988)
6
Epistemic 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

7
Epistemic Modality Evidentiality Overlap
Epistemic Modality Possibility
Necessity
Epistemic Modality Possibility
Necessity
Inference
Report Direct
Evidentiality
Based on Auwera and Plungian (1998)
8
Quechua evidential paradigm
  • Para-sha-n
  • rain-prog-3
  • It is raining.

No evidential
9
Quechua 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

10
Quechua 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)

11
Two 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
12
Generalized 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).

13
Generalized Conversational Implicatures
  • In contrast to the coded meaning, GCIs are only
    preferred interpretations, which in certain
    circumstances can be cancelled or blocked.

14
The 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)

15
The Q-Heuristic
  • operates on paradigmatic expressions, which can
    be ordered according to degree of
    informativeness
  • lt Strong, Weak gt

16
The 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)

17
The 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.

18
The 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.

19
The I-Heuristic
  • I-implicatures enrich/narrow/strengthen what is
    said
  • Example
  • boxer Igt male boxer

20
The 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

21
Maxim 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

22
Maxim 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.

23
Implicating Direct Evidence
  • Absence of evidential
  • Para-sha-n
  • rain-prog-3
  • It is raining. gt Direct evidence
  • Is the DE-implicature a GCI?

24
Implicating 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.

25
Implicating 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.

26
Implicating 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

27
Which 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

28
Which 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.

29
Which 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

30
Calculating 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.

31
Implicating 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)

32
Implicating 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?

33
Implicating 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

34
Implicating 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

35
Implicating 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).

36
Implicating 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

37
Implicating 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

38
Proposal 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.

39
Proposal 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

40
Proposal 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

41
Proposal 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

42
Implications for Theory of GCIs
  • The EE-implicature is not universal
  • It is raining.
  • does not implicate that the speaker saw it rain.

43
Implications for Theory of GCIs
  • EE-implicature hypothesis
  • evidential zero marking only gives rise to the
    DE-implicature in languages that encode
    evidentiality paradigmatically.

44
Implications 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.

45
Implications 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

46
Implications 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?
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