Table of contents
Introduction: Evidentiality Revisited
1
Section A.Evidentiality: Cognitive Grammar and Functional Grammar Approaches
Chapter 1.Evidentiality in Cognitive Grammar
13
Chapter 2.Evidentiality reconsidered
57
Section B.Evidentiality in Grammar and Discourse
Chapter 3.On the evidential use of English adverbials and their equivalents in Romance languages and Russian: A morpho-syntactic analysis
87
Chapter 4.When feeling is thinking: A lexical-semantic analysis of evidential and epistemic predicates in Spanish
105
Chapter 5.Seem-type Verbs in Dutch and German: Lijken, schijnen & scheinen
123
Chapter 6.A synchronic and diachronic study of the Dutch auxiliary ‘Zou(den)’
149
Chapter 7.Potential vs Use: Revisiting an evidential participial construction in Lithuanian
171
Section C.Evidentiality and Epistemic Modality in Discourse Domains and Genres
Chapter 8.Multifunctionality of evidential expressions in discourse domains and genres: Evidence from cross-linguistic case studies
195
Chapter 9.Evidential and epistemic stance strategies in scientific communication: A corpus study of semi-formal and expert publications
225
Chapter 10.
BE likely to and BE expected to, epistemic modality or evidentiality? Markers of (non)commitment in newspaper discourse
249
Chapter 11.Markers of evidentiality in Lithuanian newspaper discourse: A corpus-based study
271
Chapter 12.Exploring evidential uses of the passive of reporting verbs through corpus analysis
297
Index of expressions
315
Subject index
317
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