Betreff: Quotatives
Terry Janzen
janzent at CC.UMANITOBA.CA
Fri Mar 12 14:33:48 UTC 2004
Dan, and others,
In an up-coming issue of Cognitive Linguistics, Vol. 15(2), which should be out in summer 2004, there are two articles that deal with the signer portraying the perspective of others. One is Paul Dudis, "Body Partitioning and Real-Space Blends", and the other is my article "Space Rotation, Perspective Shift, and Verb Morphology in ASL".
Terry
----- Original Message -----
From: Dan Parvaz
To: SLLING-L at ADMIN.HUMBERC.ON.CA
Sent: Tuesday, March 09, 2004 10:12 AM
Subject: Re: Betreff: Quotatives
Quotatives introduce speech and actions that appear to be direct quotations or demonstrated actions, and attribute them to the subject. And example in English is
(1) And he's all, "La, la, la.." (looking around not paying attention)
(2) And mom's all, "Are you wearing that?"
So the action exmplified by humming and not paying attention are attributed to "he". The "you" in (2) actually refers to the speaker. A German example would be
(3) Und ich so: Mensch! Wie kannst du sowas sagen?
So the "du" doesn't refer to the adressee in the immediate context, but to someone in the narrated event. A final example is Sanskrit "iti" which can be used to introduce literal quotations, but can also be used to discuss states of mind, intention, etc. in something analogous to "I'm going to Grandma's house ITI she went into the forest." Note that in none of these cases can one infer that anyone actually *said* anything.
I'd like to think that ASL (and SLs in general) has a very rich set of these.
Cheers,
Dan.
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