Mouton de Gruyter, 2000. — x, 499 p. — (Empirical Approaches to Language Typology, v. 24).
Evidentials: semantics and history
Comrie, Bernard
Turkic languagesSome aspects of the acquisition of evidentials in Turkish
Aksu-Koç, Ayhan
Turkish MiŞ- and iMiŞ-items. Dimensions of a functional analysis
Csató, Éva Ágnes
Direct and indirect experience in Salar
Dwyer, Arienne
Turkic indirectives
Johanson, Lars
Reflections on -miš in Khalaj
Kiral, Filiz
Indirectivity in Gagauz
Menz, Astrid
Between resultative, historical and inferential: non-finite -mIş forms in Turkish
Schroeder, Christoph
Iranian languagesIndirectivity in Kurmanji
Bulut, Christiane
Expressions of indirectivity in spoken Modern Persian
Jahani, Carina
Le médiatif: considérations théoriques et application à l’iranien
Lazard, Gilbert
Epistemic verb forms in Persian of Iran, Afghanistan and Tajikistan
Perry, John R.
Traces of evidentiality in Classical New Persian
Utas, Bo
Other language areasEvidentiality in Georgian
Boeder, Winfried
Confirmative/nonconfirmative in Balkan Slavic, Balkan Romance, and Albanian with additional observations on Turkish, Romani, Georgian, and Lak
Friedman, Victor A.
Evidentially and typology: grammatical functions of particles in Burmese and the early stages of Indo-European languages
Gren-Eklund, Gunilla
Expressions of evidentiality in two Semitic languages – Hebrew and Arabic
Isaksson, Bo
Perfect forms as a means of expressing evidentiality in Modern Eastern Armenian
Kozintseva, Natalia A.
Evidentiality in Komi Zyryan
Leinonen, Marja
Perfect, evidentiality and related categories in Tungusic languages
Malchukov, Andrej L.
Evidentiality in Kinnauri
Saxena, Anju