The Grammar of Knowledge offers both a linguistic and anthropological perspective on the expression of information sources as well as inferences assumptions probability and possibility and gradations of doubt and beliefs in a range of languages. The book investigates twelve different languages from families including Tibeto-Burman Nakh-Dagestani and Austronesian all of which share the property of requiring the source of information to be specified in every sentence. In these languages it may not be possible to say merely that 'the man went fishing'. Instead the source of evidence for the statement must also be specified usually through the use of evidential markers. For example it may be necessary to indicate whether the speaker saw the man go fishing; has simply assumed that the man went fishing; or was told that he went fishing by a third party. Some languages such as Hinuq and Tatar distinguish between first-hand and non first-hand information sources; others such as Ersu mark three distinct types of information - directly required inferred or assumed and reported. Some require an even greater level of specification: Asheninka Perene from South America has a specific marker to express suspicions or misgivings. Like others in the series the book illustrates and examines these aspects of language in different cultural and linguistic settings. It will interest linguists of all persuasions as well as linguistically-minded anthropologists.
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