TY - BOOK AU - Amiridze,Nino AU - Aplonova,Ekaterina AU - Casartelli,Daniela E. AU - Cruschina,Silvio AU - Durongbhan,Pholpat AU - Fiedler,Sophia AU - Grzech,Karolina AU - Hennemann,Anja AU - Nikitina,Tatiana AU - Posio,Pekka AU - Remberger,Eva-Maria AU - Rosemeyer,Malte AU - Spronck,Stef AU - Teptiuk,Denys AU - Tiratanti,Prapatsorn TI - The Grammar of Thinking: From Reported Speech to Reported Thought in the Languages of the World T2 - Trends in Linguistics. Studies and Monographs [TiLSM] , SN - 9783111065502 U1 - 401.9 23//eng/20230913eng PY - 2023///] CY - Berlin, Boston PB - De Gruyter Mouton KW - Psycholinguistics KW - Epistemizität KW - Indirekte Rede KW - Zitat KW - Epistemicity KW - Quotation KW - Reported Speech and Thought N1 - Frontmatter --; Contents --; 1 Introduction --; Part I: Contrasting reported speech and reported thought --; 2 The morphosyntax of reported speech and reported thought: A preliminary survey --; 3 To want, to think, to say: The development of WANT in German from volitional to reportative modal --; 4 Reporting speech and thought in Upper Napo Kichwa --; 5 On the emergence of quotative bueno in Spanish: A dialectal view --; Part II: Pathways from saying to thinking --; 6 Thinking out loud? Je me suis dit ‘I said to myself’ and j’étais là ‘I was there’ in French talk-in-interaction --; 7 Self-quotations of speech and thought, and how to distinguish them --; 8 When saying becomes thinking: A case of the Georgian autonomous quotative metki --; 9 Reported thought embedded in reported speech in Thai news reports --; Part III: Reported thought as a category in its own right --; 10 Complementizer deletion in structures of reporting on thinking in Argentinian Spanish and Brazilian Portuguese --; 11 Towards a typology of reported thought --; Index; restricted access; Issued also in print N2 - Sentence (1) represents the phenomenon of reported thought, (2) that of reported speech: (1) Sasha thought: "This is fine" or Sasha thought that this would be fine (2) Sasha said: "This is fine" or Sasha said that this would be fine While sentences as in (1) have often been discussed in the context of those in (2) the former have rarely received specific attention. This has meant that much of the semantic and structural complexity, cross-linguistic variation, as well as the precise relation between (1) and (2) and related phenomena have remained unstudied. Addressing this gap, this volume represents the first collection of studies specifically dedicated to reported thought. It introduces a wide variety of cross-linguistic examples of the phenomenon and brings together authors from linguistic typology, corpus and interactional linguistics, and formal and functional theories of syntax to shed light on how talking about thoughts can become grammar in the languages of the world. The book should be of interest to linguists, philosophers of language, linguistic anthropologists and communication specialists seeking to understand topics at the boundary of stylistics and morphosyntax, as well as the grammar of epistemicity UR - https://doi.org/10.1515/9783111065830 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9783111065830 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/document/cover/isbn/9783111065830/original ER -