Auditory Evidentiality ( Concept )
http://purl.org/linguistics/gold/AuditoryEvidentiality
Thing |_
Abstract |_
Linguistic Property |_
Morphosyntactic Property |_
Evidentiality Property
|_ Auditory Evidentiality
Definition:
AuditoryEvidentiality encodes the fact that the speaker came to believe the content of the expression through direct auditory experience; they heard it. This does not include spoken reported accounts, but only direct sensory evidence, such as the situation of 'hearing a tree fall' [Palmer 2001, 38].
| Properties | Values | Definition |
abbreviation
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Thing
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The abbreviated form representing a scientific term, e.g., ACC, 2, CL.
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argument
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Clause
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The syntactic entity about which something is predicated.
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feature
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Linguistic Property
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The relation between a linguistic unit and a linguistic feature. A feature inheres in its host. NOTE: this relation is distinct from the hasFeature which pertains to data structures.
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has Example
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Thing
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has Page Information
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Thing
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predicate
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Clause
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The predicate is the relation between the Clause and a portion of a clause, excluding the subject, that expresses something about the subject [Crystal 1980, 280; Hartmann and Stork 1972, 182; Pei and Gaynor 1954, 173; Pike and Pike 1982, 40; Crystal 1985, 241-242].
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