Linguistics and English Language

Linguistic Circle

Speaker: Nathan Hill (SOAS)

Title: "The contribution of Tibetan to the Study of evidentiality"

Abstract: The first section of this talk outlines the history of research on the Lhasa Tibetan verbal system, isolating three phases: 1. pedagogical grammars that treat evidential categories as person agreement, 2. linguistics who describe the verbal system with hierarchies of binary features, 3. those who describe the semantic categories as isomorphic with morphosyntactic categories.

The second section of the talk explores how two conceptualizations 'conjunct-disjunct' and 'egophoric' were born from, or incubated within, the description of Lhasa Tibetan. I conclude both that 'conjunct-disjunct' is an unhelpful way of looking at languages ('egophoric' less so) and that, mislead by these thought patterns, typologists have consistently misused and misunderstood Tibetan evidence.

Contact details

Dr Rhona Alcorn

Oct 27 2016 -

Linguistic Circle

27 Oct 2016: The contribution of Tibetan to the Study of evidentiality

Room 3.10/3.11, Dugald Stewart Building, 3 Charles Street, Edinburgh, EH8 9AD