1. IntroductionFootnote 1
The sentence in (1a) is a felicitous way to begin a story, but (1b) is not (with capitalization indicating focal stress). Example (1b) becomes good if embedded in the discourse context in (2).
Following Höhle's (Reference Höhle and Jacobs1992) seminal paper, the stressing of the finite verb or auxiliary in specific discourse contexts, as in (2B), is usually called ‘verum focus’. Höhle's proposal – developed on the basis of German – is that stress on an element in the left periphery signals focus on a silent verum operator, defined as in (3). Focus on this operator serves to emphasize the truth of the proposition.
(3) [[ verum (p) ]] ≈ ‘It is true that p’
Many subsequent researchers have debated the correct analysis of verum, often concentrating on data from English and German.Footnote 2 Roughly speaking, two main strands of analysis have been proposed: focus-based analyses (starting with Höhle Reference Höhle and Jacobs1992), and common ground/discourse management-based analyses (with an early major contribution being Romero and Han Reference Romero and Han2004; see Krifka Reference Krifka2008 on common ground management). In order to avoid committing to a focus-based analysis, I will refer to the phenomenon more neutrally here as ‘verum’.
My primary goal in this article is to add to the emerging cross-linguistic empirical landscape with respect to verum. I will present data to show that the Tsimshianic language Gitksan has a verum construction which is strikingly similar to Germanic verum in its distribution and discourse effects. This is in spite of verum being marked in a completely different way in Gitksan than in Germanic, namely by a dedicated particle (k'ap). I will argue that the semantic contribution of the Gitksan verum particle can be captured by a discourse management analysis (see Gutzmann and Castroviejo Miró Reference Gutzmann, Miró, Bonami and Cabredo-Hofherr2011, Repp Reference Repp, Gutzmann and Gärtner2013). I propose the condition for the Gitksan verum operator in (4). This is informally stated for now, but will be modeled using Commitment Space Semantics (Cohen and Krifka Reference Cohen and Krifka2014; Krifka Reference Krifka2015, Reference Krifka, Lee, Kiefer and Krifka2017, a.o.) below.
(4) Discourse condition on verum (p):
The speaker believes that some interlocutor is committed to ¬p.
This analysis does not involve focus. This is consistent with the fact that Gitksan verum is not marked like any focus phenomena in the language. The analysis also does not require discourse givenness of either p or ¬p; we will see that this correctly derives a semantic difference between Gitksan and English verum.
The remainder of the introduction provides background on Gitksan, the particle k'ap, and the data-collection methodology used. Section 2 presents Commitment Space Semantics and models the discourse condition in (4) within that framework. Section 3, the core of the article, systematically illustrates the discourse properties of the particle k'ap and argues that its distribution and function are accurately captured by (4). Section 4 highlights a cross-linguistic difference between English and Gitksan verum, to do with the (non-)importance of givenness. Section 5 compares the proposed analysis to alternatives, and outlines avenues for future research.
1.1 Introduction to Gitksan and to k’ap
‘Gitksan’ (ISO code git) is the English name for an Interior Tsimshianic dialect continuum which is spoken in the northwest Interior of British Columbia, mostly along the Skeena River. Gitksan is classified as ‘threatened’ by Ethnologue <https://www.ethnologue.com/language/git> and has aproximately 523 fluent speakers (Dunlop et al. Reference Dunlop, Gessner, Herbert and Parker2018).
The Gitksan particle which I will argue encodes verum is k'ap; it is sometimes pronounced ap, depending on the dialect. Rigsby (Reference Rigsby1986:381) classifies k'ap as a ‘preverbal’, but does not address its syntax beyond this. My focus here is the semantic contribution of k'ap, but I provide some brief background on Gitksan clause structure so that the placement of k'ap will be transparent.
Gitksan is a head-marking predicate-initial language. The predicate may be preceded by a fronted nominal, as in (5b), by ‘dependent markers’ and other pre-predicative operators, as in (6), and/or by one or more of over a hundred ‘preverbals’, as in (7).Footnote 3
The preverbals, of which k'ap is one, ‘signify a range of adverbial notions, which include local adverbial, manner, time, and degree concepts’ (Rigsby Reference Rigsby1986:364b). Their morpho-syntactic status is not clear-cut; Rigsby (Reference Rigsby1986:58–59) argues that most preverbals are independent words (rather than proclitics or prefixes).
K'ap can appear in declarative sentences, as in (8), and in polar questions, as in (9).
K'ap is also marginally acceptable inside wh-questions, and acceptable for some speakers in imperatives. I will mostly set these sentence-types aside, but for some discussion, see section 5.2.
Following Boas's (Reference Boas1911) Tsimshian grammar, Rigsby (Reference Rigsby1986:381) glosses k'ap as ‘certainly, indeed, for sure’. Its counterpart in closely related Nisga'a is glossed by Tarpent (Reference Tarpent1987:375) as ‘absolutely must’; she also gives the translations ‘must, have to, absolutely, simply, really, no getting out of it, no two ways about it, no choice about it’ (Tarpent Reference Tarpent1987:383). In the Sm'algyax̱ Living Legacy Talking Dictionary, the entry for the cognate ḵ'ap is ‘really; certainly; absolutely; intensifier of following predication’ <http://web.unbc.ca/~smalgyax/>.Footnote 5 Speakers’ English translations of k'ap often contain verum emphasis, as in (10); they may also contain intensifying adverbials, as in (11).
Consultants frequently offer comments or translations which attempt to convey the contribution of k'ap. Examples include: ‘absolutely’; ‘definitely’; ‘she's saying that she isn't lying’; ‘for sure’; ‘a little stressed’; ‘if you're defending your statement’; ‘quite positive’; ‘it's really, actually’; ‘a more definite answer’; ‘a little more emphatic’; ‘not unless you were arguing’; ‘an enhancement marker’; ‘if you guys are having an argument’; ‘when you're speaking in a loud voice’; ‘screaming’; ‘adamantly’; ‘directive’; ‘no ifs, ands, or buts’. Such comments give insightful clues about the contribution of k'ap. The challenge, of course, is to convert these clues into explicit generalizations, and then into an analysis which predicts exactly when k'ap is and is not licensed.
1.2 Methodology
The data presented here result from the author's fieldwork with six speakers of three dialects. The primary consultants were Barbara Sennott, from Ansba'yaxw (Kispiox), Vincent Gogag, from Git-anyaaw (Gitanyow), Hector Hill, from Gijigyukwhla (Gitsegukla), and Jeanne Harris, from Ansba'yaxw. Data were also elicited from Ray Jones (from Prince Rupert and Gijigyukwhla) and from Herbert Russell (Gijigyukwhla). Readers may notice dialect-based phonological and lexical differences in the data; these do not affect the semantics.
The data were elicited using several fieldwork methodologies: translation tasks (in both directions), elicited production tasks, acceptability judgment tasks, and storyboards. Acceptability judgment tasks involve the consultant evaluating a Gitksan utterance in a specific discourse context, which is presented verbally, sometimes with the help of pictures. Consultants were not given a strict response scale, but simply responded about whether the sentence sounded acceptable in the context. Storyboards involve the presentation of a series of pictures, in response to which the consultant tells a story. The storyboards are designed to elicit specific linguistic phenomena (and thus differ from all-purpose narrative-eliciting techniques such as the Pear Stories (Chafe Reference Chafe1980) or Frog Stories (Berman and Slobin Reference Berman and Slobin1994)). See Matthewson (Reference Matthewson2004), Burton and Matthewson (Reference Burton, Matthewson, Ryan Bochnak and Matthewson2015), papers in Bochnak and Matthewson (Reference Bochnak and Matthewson2015), and Tonhauser and Matthewson (Reference Tonhauser and Matthewson2016), a.o., for further details of these methodologies.
Since the acceptability of verum is highly sensitive to discourse context, all the data were elicited in controlled contexts. In some cases, the contexts were designed to elicit judgments on discourse-initial utterances. However, an interesting situation arose in these cases, namely that consultants who were presented with a discourse-initial context often enriched the context in their minds. Thus, on several occasions, consultants accepted k'ap in supposedly discourse-initial contexts, but follow-up questioning revealed that the utterance was in fact only acceptable in an accommodated non-discourse-initial context. These results underline the usefulness of follow-up questioning in one-on-one fieldwork; see Bochnak and Matthewson (Reference Bochnak and Matthewson2020) for discussion.
A final note is that the expression of verum is not obligatory when it is licensed, in either Gitksan or English. In discourse contexts which license verum, k'ap is often, but not always, volunteered. In the data I note when an utterance was volunteered by the consultant. The absence of such an indication on an acceptable utterance means that it was judged as acceptable in the context when the researcher offered it. I do not routinely mark similar information for English translations, but all translations were either offered to the consultant as part of the elicitation prompt, or were volunteered or accepted by the consultant as the translation of the Gitksan utterance.
2. Theoretical background and proposal
Krifka's (Reference Krifka2015, Reference Krifka, Lee, Kiefer and Krifka2017) Commitment Space Semantics (see also Cohen and Krifka Reference Cohen and Krifka2014) is designed to deal with the impact on the discourse of various speech acts. It utilizes concepts similar to those used in research on discourse management and dynamic pragmatics, including Gunlogson (Reference Gunlogson2003, Reference Gunlogson2008); Portner (Reference Portner, Watanabe and Young2004); Farkas and Bruce (Reference Farkas and Bruce2010); Malamud and Stephenson (Reference Malamud and Stephenson2015), among many others. The basic concepts of Krifka's framework are commitment states, commitment spaces, and commitment space developments.
The commitment state of a discourse corresponds to the common ground (Stalnaker Reference Stalnaker and Cole1978, a.o.): it contains the set of propositions that are publicly shared by all interlocutors. The commitment space is the set of possible or ‘legal’ continuations of the current commitment state; it represents the projected future development of the discourse. The commitment space is affected by speech acts performed; for example, if a speaker S1 asserts a proposition p, all future continuations of the discourse contain the information that S1 is publicly committed to p. And commitment space developments are sequences of commitment spaces, representing a record of the conversation, including speech acts that have been performed by each interlocutor. The model thus enables us to keep track of the propositions that each interlocutor has publicly committed to (even if those propositions did not end up being accepted into the commitment state/common ground). For all formal definitions, the reader is referred to Krifka (Reference Krifka2015, Reference Krifka, Lee, Kiefer and Krifka2017).
Within Commitment Space Semantics, the proposed condition on verum given in (4) (that the speaker believes that some interlocutor is committed to ¬p) can be stated as in (12). The turnstile symbol ⊢ indicates public commitment to a proposition. I now also explicitly add information about the truth-conditional effect of the verum operator – which is nothing (i.e., verum applied to a proposition p simply returns p at the truth-conditional level).
The claim that verum has no effect on the asserted truth conditions is supported by the fact that the contribution of k'ap can never scope under, for instance, negation, as shown in (13). Lisa's utterance here truth-conditionally conveys that Aidan is not coming; it cannot mean that the speaker does not believe that somebody committed to the belief that Aidan is coming.
Thus, k'ap's contribution is exclusively not-at-issue in the sense of Potts (Reference Potts2005), Tonhauser (Reference Tonhauser2012), a.o., and it is use-conditional (as opposed to truth-conditional) in the sense of Gutzmann (Reference Gutzmann, Blühdorn and Lohnstein2012).
3. The distribution and function of Gitksan k'ap
In this section I test the predictions of the proposal in (12). The data are organized by types of discourse context, as summarized in Table 1. The predictions are sometimes not a matter of simple (un)acceptability. Instead, the core prediction of (12) is that there must be some prior controversy for k'ap to be licensed. This controversy is easily satisfied in cases of correcting a prior assertion or implication of ¬p (rows ii, iii), but is a detectable extra requirement in a range of other contexts (rows iv–viii, and x). K'ap is straightforwardly ruled out discourse-initially (row i) and in answer to wh-questions (row ix), since here, no interlocutor has typically committed themselves to ¬p.
3.1 K'ap does not appear discourse-initially
As noted by many authors and as shown in (1b) above, verum is infelicitous discourse-initially (see for example Gutzmann and Castroviejo Miró Reference Gutzmann, Miró, Bonami and Cabredo-Hofherr2011:160, Lohnstein Reference Lohnstein, Blühdorn and Lohnstein2012:14). This follows from the condition in (12), because when a proposition p is asserted in a discourse-initial context, nobody has performed any other speech acts yet. Therefore, no interlocutor has committed themselves to ¬p.
The prediction that Gitksan k'ap is rejected in discourse-initial contexts is upheld, as shown in (14)–(17).
3.2 K'ap appears following a prior assertion of ¬p
A core use of verum is when a speaker denies a previous utterance. In terms of the condition in (12), verum (p) is licensed by the prior assertion of ¬p by a speaker Sx, because that prior assertion updates the commitment space with Sx ⊢ ¬p (Krifka Reference Krifka2015).
This prediction is upheld for k'ap, as shown in (18)–(21). Example (18) is a near-minimal pair with the infelicitous discourse-initial case in (15). Another case of this type was seen in (13).Footnote 7
3.3 K'ap appears following a prior implication of ¬p
The proposed analysis is that k'ap requires the speaker to believe that some interlocutor is publicly committed to the negation of p. Within Krifka's (Reference Krifka2015) system, implicatures become part of an interlocutor's set of public commitments: Krifka diagrams a case where a conversational implicature is reflected in the commitment space development (his Figure 6). The same would reasonably hold for presuppositions of utterances; they become public commitments of the speaker.
This predicts that verum (p) can be used to correct not just a prior assertion of ¬p, but also a previous implication that ¬p. This is correct; Gitksan speakers frequently volunteer k'ap in such contexts. In some cases below, I remain agnostic about exactly what kind of implication is involved (presupposition, conversational implicature, or conventional implicature), because Gitksan-internal tests have not been done to tease these apart.
We begin with (22). Assuming that Gitksan wh-questions have discourse effects similar to English ones, the relevant implication here (that Aidan isn't coming) is probably a presupposition.Footnote 8
Another presupposition denial case is (23). The felicity of k'ap is predicted by the analysis. Interestingly, verum marking is not good in English in this environment. In section 4 we will see that this reflects a difference between the languages in terms of givenness requirements on verum.Footnote 9
The data in (24)–(25) involve denials of implications which arise from the Gitksan counterparts of ‘pretend’ and ‘promise’.
In (26), A's utterance generates the implication that Peter is not a white guy, because if A had known that Peter was a white guy, s/he would have said so (by ordinary Quantity Maxim effects), rather than merely talking about what Peter thinks. B corrects this implication using k'ap.
Cases where a speaker talks about their own beliefs often give rise to the implication that the embedded proposition is true (see Hacquard and Lidz Reference Hacquard and Lidz2018, a.o., for the observation that belief reports are often used to make indirect assertions). We see this in (27) and (28), which involve respectively a matrix belief predicate and an epistemic modal (the inferential evidential =ima'; Peterson Reference Peterson2010, Matthewson Reference Matthewson2013). The implication in both cases is corrected using k'ap. These contexts are adapted from Zimmermann and Hole (Reference Zimmermann and Hole2008).
The example in (29) is similar, but involves negation in the matrix clause. The utterance of ‘I don't think p’ gives rise to the implication ¬p, which the second speaker corrects using verum.
A final interesting case involves a silent implication of ¬p. Barbara's accusing body language is sufficient to commit her to the implication that Lisa took the cookie.
3.4 Following a prior assertion of p: Controversy required
According to the proposed analysis, verum requires the speaker to believe that some interlocutor is committed to the negation of p. This predicts that verum (p) will not straightforwardly be felicitous following a prior assertion of p itself. However, verum should become possible in such cases if there is controversy about the status of p amongst the interlocutors. This leads to the effect of emphatic agreement. Examples are given in (31)–(32). In (32), the first utterance already contains k'ap; the first speaker is saying ‘It's true that …’, thus implicitly responding to some controversy in the context.
It is difficult to prove conclusively that prior controversy is needed for k'ap to be acceptable in cases of agreement with a prior utterance. However, I claim that the facts in Gitksan are similar to those in English. For English, Repp (Reference Repp, Gutzmann and Gärtner2013:28–29) argues that ‘verum cannot be used to affirm the proposition that was uttered by the previous speaker if not uttered in a […] more complex discourse.’ Repp gives (33) as an example, stating that (33B) is felicitous only if the question whether Paul had a banana was at issue well before A's utterance.
The claim that controversy is required to license verum in agreement cases is supported by the fact that over many elicitation sessions with each consultant, none has volunteered k'ap in a context where a speaker is simply confirming what a previous speaker has said. K'ap is often judged as less than perfect in contexts of agreeing, as in (34), and comments like the one in (35) further support the idea that controversy in the context is required.
Example (36) is an interesting case where the speaker himself is the person who provides the controversy, by having previously been committed to ¬p and then changing his mind. Billy can naturally be assumed to have believed (before Pearl's utterance) that his shirt was not on backwards.
This example is interesting from the point of view of the proposed analysis, because it is not the case that Billy (or anybody else) has publicly committed to the negation of his utterance's prejacent (that his shirt is on correctly).Footnote 10 The issue of how exactly ‘commitments’ should be defined within Commitment Space Semantics is a larger question which I cannot solve here; however, examples like (36) might suggest that commitments can exist without having been explicitly uttered. This would fit with Krifka's (Reference Krifka2015) idea that the commitment state corresponds to the common ground, since it is standardly assumed that propositions can be in the common ground without having been uttered by any interlocutor.
This raises a further question, however. If a speaker's internal beliefs can count as commitments without having been publicly uttered, what then distinguishes (36) from the ‘out-of-the-blue’ cases discussed in section 3.1, where k'ap is resoundingly rejected?
The first step to answering this is to consider whether discourse-initial k'ap-utterances can be rescued by virtue of the speaker having previously believed the opposite. The answer is ‘no’: speaker surprise by itself does not license verum. This is shown by (37), which differs from (36) only in that the k'ap-utterance is discourse-initial:
I interpret these facts as follows. First, propositions can count as interlocutor commitments without having been explicitly uttered, but this is only possible for very obvious, general-knowledge propositions (such as that shirts are usually worn frontwards); it is not possible for random propositions about individuals, such as that Michael doesn't have a headache or that Charlie is healthy (see (14) and (16) above). In addition, there really must be some controversy in the discourse context for verum to be felicitous. This is not the case in (37), but it is arguably the case in (36).
3.5 Following a prior implication of p: Controversy required
We saw in section 3.3 that implications of utterances can count as public commitments by interlocutors. Here we look at cases where a prior utterance implies p. The prediction – as with prior assertion of p – is that k'ap should be felicitous only if there is reason to believe that an interlocutor is committed to the negation of p. This is what I have been calling the controversy requirement.Footnote 11
A clear case where verum should be infelicitous, because there is no controversy, is when a speaker agrees with the presupposition of a prior utterance. Presuppositions are taken to be assumed by all interlocutors, hence nobody can be committed to their negation. As predicted, k'ap is bad when agreeing with a presupposition, as shown in (38).
The controversy requirement is further supported by cases like (39); the reference to ‘trying to convince’ someone suggests that the implication that Mark finished his work is controversial.
The example in (40) was given by three separate speakers with only minor irrelevant differences. All three speakers volunteered the sentence with k'ap.
Promise (p) can often be taken to implicate p (see discussion of (25) above), so our analysis predicts that (40) should only be licensed if there is additional controversy about p in the context. Indeed, in the context for (40), the promise looks likely to be unfulfilled (since Aidan has not shown up). This is supported by the fact that one speaker, upon rejecting this sentence with k'ap removed, commented “No, it needs the ap. Because you're making reassurances.” If the speaker is reassuring the addressee that Aidan will come, this suggests that the addressee believes he isn't coming.
3.6 In answers to polar questions: Controversy required
K'ap is felicitous inside answers to polar questions, but only in a subset of discourse contexts; verum cannot be used if the question is neutral or unbiased. Correspondingly, there is always a perceived emphatic effect when verum is used in the answer.
Example (41) shows that k'ap is rejected in a context where an expected or uncontroversial answer is given.
Consultant's comment on ap-version: “I AM going to go. It's more emphasis that, hell or high water, you won't be left behind.”
Another consultant provides (42) for this conversation; again, the comment on the k'ap-version reveals that verum marking requires a context with controversy. In support of this, the consultant for (42) freely accepts, without the need for any commentary, k'ap in the reply in a more controversial context, in which my friends and I go to the movies every Friday but you've never come along before.
Example (43) provides another case showing that k'ap is rejected in the answer to a neutral polar question.
3.7 In answers to indirect polar questions: Controversy required
Zimmermann and Hole (Reference Zimmermann and Hole2008) observe that verum can be used in answers to indirect or implicit polar questions. This is also the case for k'ap, as shown in (44)–(45). In (44), the implicit question is ‘Is Henry coming today?’ and in (45), it is ‘Did Charlie steal my purse?’
The analysis predicts that the verum answers in (44)–(45) will only be felicitous if there is some controversy in the context, beyond the immediately preceding utterances. Example (44) is particularly interesting because while the prejacent propositions of Barbara's utterances entail the negation of an earlier public commitment, they do not equal the negation of that prior commitment. Lisa is publicly committed to the proposition that Charlie might have stolen her purse (because she asserts this), and is also committed to the proposition that he might not have stolen it (because she implies this, due to her failure to simply assert that he did steal it). Barbara's answers entail the negation of these two prior commitments respectively, but they do not strictly have the form of their negations.
Although it is, again, difficult to prove conclusively the controversy requirement, there is some evidence for it. Consider (46), for example, where the implicit question in the context is ‘Who punched the dog?’ The consultant's comment suggests that a neutral context is not sufficient to license verum. K'ap requires the speaker to believe that he needs to defend his innocence.
3.8 Inside polar questions: Controversy required
K'ap can appear inside polar questions, but not in neutral contexts. This is shown in (47)–(49). In (48)–(49), two consultants gave similar judgments, while a third speaker simply rejected k'ap in this non-controversial context.
In (50), question-internal k'ap is rejected in a non-controversial context, and in (51), k'ap's controversy requirement is captured by the comment, which suggests that the question is uttered aggressively.
In (52), there is controversy because B is skeptical that Bellingham is the capital of Washington (because, of course, Olympia is).
In terms of analysis, I assume that k'ap has its normal use-conditional effect, even when the prejacent is being questioned (see Repp Reference Repp, Gutzmann and Gärtner2013, Romero Reference Romero, Csipak and Zeijlstra2015).Footnote 13 I further assume a standard view that the denotation of polar questions is the set of possible answers: {p, ¬p}. I then adopt ideas by Davis and McCready (Reference Davis and McCready2016) about expressives (use-conditional elements) in questions, following Gutzmann et al. (Reference Gutzmann, Hartmann and Matthewson2020) for their application to verum. Davis and McCready argue that expressives in questions can operate on whatever is the true answer to the question. This idea predicts that speakers can use k'ap inside a polar question if they believe that somebody (presumably usually the addressee) is committed to the false answer. In (52), for example, B believes A is committed to the false proposition that Bellingham is the capital of Washington.
3.9 Verum does not appear in neutral answers to wh-questions
The analysis predicts that k'ap cannot be used in an answer to a wh-question, since in ordinary contexts in which a wh-question is asked, no discourse participant is committed to one particular answer to the question.Footnote 14 This is noted also by Leonetti and Escandell-Vidal (Reference Leonetti, Escandell-Vidal, Dufter and Jacob2009) for Spanish and by Gutzmann and Castroviejo Miró (Reference Gutzmann, Miró, Bonami and Cabredo-Hofherr2011) for German. The following data show that Gitksan speakers either reject k'ap in answer to a wh-question, or offer comments indicating that prior controversy is required.
3.10 In antecedent of a conditional: Controversy required
According to Zimmermann and Hole (Reference Zimmermann and Hole2008), verum in the antecedent of conditionals ‘stress[es] the conditionality’; their example involves a situation where the truth of the antecedent is doubted. This characterization also appears to be true of k'ap, as shown in (56)–(57).
As noted by Romero (Reference Romero, Csipak and Zeijlstra2015), among others, conditional antecedents have a parallel with interrogatives; if p signals that the question of whether p is true is an open issue. We can apply the same approach to conditional antecedents containing k'ap as we did for polar questions in the previous section: in (57), for example, Pearl believes that the false answer to the question (whether Billy will be better tomorrow) is in someone's commitment slate (namely, Billy's).
3.11 Summary
Throughout this core section of the article, we have seen that Gitksan k'ap is felicitous whenever the speaker believes that the negation of the prejacent proposition is in some interlocutor's commitment slate. This correctly predicts that k'ap is disallowed discourse-initially and in answer to a wh-question, straightforwardly felicitous after assertion or implication of ¬p, and acceptable in all other contexts only if there is prior controversy about the truth value of p. The results are in accord with the predictions laid out in Table 1 at the beginning of this section.
4. A cross-linguistic difference: The (non-)importance of givenness
In this section I report on a difference between Gitksan k'ap and English verum marking. Consider first (58).
Michael's utterance expresses the proposition that he didn't do anything on his birthday, which entails that he didn't go to a restaurant. Hence, he is clearly committed to the proposition that he didn't go to a restaurant. This licenses the use of k'ap in T.J.'s response, in accordance with the proposed analysis of k'ap.Footnote 15 Notice, however, that verum in the English translation of T.J.'s utterance is infelicitous.Footnote 16 (59) is a similar case:
Kyra's assertion that Fluffy is a dog clearly commits her to the proposition that Fluffy isn't a snake; it is therefore unsurprising that k'ap is felicitous in Michael's response. Again, however, English does not pattern in a similar fashion; verum is disallowed. And again in (60), k'ap is licensed because the addressee is committed to the proposition that Clarissa gives part of the speech in English – yet verum is inappropriate in English in this context.
I propose that the difference between the languages is that English verum marking requires givenness of the prejacent proposition, while Gitksan verum marking does not. In Gitksan, (58)–(60) are fine with k'ap because in each case, the addressee is committed to the negation of k'ap's prejacent, through a simple entailment relation: doing nothing entails not going to a restaurant, being a dog entails not being a snake, and saying part of a speech in English entails not speaking only Giyanimx. In English, however, it is not sufficient for the prejacent's negation to be entailed by previous discourse commitments; the prejacent itself must have been given in prior discourse (see Gutzmann et al. Reference Gutzmann, Hartmann and Matthewson2020, a.o., on the givenness requirement on Germanic verum, and Rochemont Reference Rochemont, Féry and Ishihara2016; Gyuris (Reference Gyuris, Gutzmann, Meier, Rullmann and Zimmermann2020); Wagner (Reference Wagner, Gutzmann, Matthewson, Meier, Rullmann and Zimmermann2020) for recent general overviews of givenness). In the contexts of (58)–(60), the prejacent has not already been mentioned in the discourse, therefore English verum marking is infelicitous. We return to the theoretical implications of this in the next section.
5. Conclusions
In this article I have argued that the Gitksan preverbal element k'ap is a marker of verum, and I have provided a discourse management analysis of its effects. I looked at ten types of discourse context and showed that the analysis predicts when k'ap is straightforwardly felicitous, when it is completely ruled out, and when it is allowed but requires prior controversy within the discourse.
In this final section, I compare the analysis proposed here with analyses of similar phenomena in other languages, and outline some implications and directions for future research.
5.1 Comparison with other analyses
There is active theoretical debate about the best analysis of verum. As mentioned earlier, the two main families of approaches are focus-based analyses and discourse management operator analyses. The analysis proposed here is similar to discourse management approaches like that of Repp (Reference Repp, Gutzmann and Gärtner2013) and Romero (Reference Romero, Csipak and Zeijlstra2015); it is particularly similar (though not identical) to recent proposals by Gutzmann et al. (Reference Gutzmann, Hartmann and Matthewson2020). However, the current study has identified a new cross-linguistic difference in the behaviour of verum, which I argue provides support for a non-focus-based analysis.
According to focus-based analyses, verum involves focus on an abstract operator (Höhle Reference Höhle and Jacobs1992). A typical instantiation of this idea holds that there is focus on a covert element (present in every finite sentence) which marks the prejacent proposition as true; focusing this element invokes a contrast with the salient alternative, the negation of the prejacent. Approaches of this type include Büring (Reference Büring, Blühdorn, Breindl and Waßner2006) and Stommel (Reference Stommel2011, Reference Stommel, Blühdorn and Lohnstein2012) for German, Zimmermann and Hole (Reference Zimmermann and Hole2008) for a range of languages, Leonetti and Escandell-Vidal (Reference Leonetti, Escandell-Vidal, Dufter and Jacob2009) for Spanish, and Bennett et al. (Reference Bennett, Elfner and McCloskey2015) for Irish.Footnote 17
An alternative set of analyses assign the effect of verum not to focus but to a dedicated operator, which is present only when verum emphasis is desired.Footnote 18 Analyses along these lines include those of Romero and Han (Reference Romero and Han2004), Gutzmann and Castroviejo Miró (Reference Gutzmann, Miró, Bonami and Cabredo-Hofherr2011), Gutzmann (Reference Gutzmann, Blühdorn and Lohnstein2012), Repp (Reference Repp, Gutzmann and Gärtner2013), Romero (Reference Romero, Csipak and Zeijlstra2015), among others. Romero (Reference Romero, Csipak and Zeijlstra2015), adapting ideas from Romero and Han (Reference Romero and Han2004), proposes that verum contributes the use-conditional content in (61). This is paraphrased as ‘x is sure that, in all the worlds satisfying x's conversational goals, p is added to the Common Ground.’Footnote 19
Another version of this type of analysis relates verum to the Question Under Discussion (QUD); for example, Gutzmann and Castroviejo Miró (Reference Gutzmann, Miró, Bonami and Cabredo-Hofherr2011:160) argue that verum is an instruction from the speaker to downdate (resolve) the QUD.Footnote 20
One reason I have adopted a lexical operator analysis of verum, rather than a focus-based one, is that in Gitksan (unlike in English or German), there is no similarity between how verum is marked and how focus is marked. Constituent focus is marked by A’-movement to sentence-initial position (Davis and Brown Reference Davis and Brown2011, Bicevskis et al. Reference Bicevskis, Davis, Matthewson, Paperno and Keenan2017), and predicate focus is either not marked at all, or optionally marked with the exhaustive focus element k'am (Martin Reference Martin, Reisinger and Mellesmoen2019). It therefore seems simpler to take the facts at face value: there is a preverbal element which appears only in verum contexts, and which has detectable discourse effects. The obvious thing to do is to assign those effects to the lexical entry of this morpheme.Footnote 21
The second reason why I believe the Gitksan data support a discourse management analysis, rather than a focus-based one, relates to the givenness difference between Gitksan k'ap and English verum marking, discussed in the previous section. As is well-known, focus and (non-)givenness are related semantic notions, though not reducible to each other. They are also prosodically similar in English: focused material is prosodically prominent, while given material is prosodically reduced (Schwarzschild Reference Schwarzschild1999, among many others). Given this, we may speculate about the link between verum, givenness and focus as follows (this is adapted from Gutzmann et al. Reference Gutzmann, Hartmann and Matthewson2020).
Suppose that English verum includes a givenness requirement: the prejacent p must be given in the discourse. The lexical material in the prejacent would then be expected to all be de-accented. However, since there must be a nuclear pitch accent in every utterance, this pitch accent is realized on a left-periphery element such as an auxiliary DO. This approach would allow us to account for the parallel realisation of verum and focus in English, without either analyzing English verum as involving focus, or resorting to an accidental homonymy of focus marking and verum marking.
In Gitksan, on the other hand, there is no givenness requirement on verum/k'ap. Therefore, no focus-like phenomena are involved in verum marking. The difference between the languages reduces to the slightly different lexical semantics of their respective discourse management operators. This allows a basically uniform approach to the semantics of verum cross-linguistically.
My proposal about the discourse conditions on Gitksan verum differs subtly from previous discourse-management-based proposals. For example, it differs from Romero's in (61), according to which verum is felicitous whenever the speaker is sure that the prejacent should enter the Common Ground. Under Romero's approach, the effects of ‘bias’ with verum arise indirectly, as an epistemic implicature. For example, in a polar question containing verum, the speaker ‘wonders […] whether the addressee has fully convincing evidence for adding p to the CG’ (Romero Reference Romero, Csipak and Zeijlstra2015:506). This leads to the implicature that there is doubt about p. Roughly, then, the approach put forward here hardwires into the use-conditions what Romero's analysis derives via implicature. Conversely, the current analysis can derive as an implicature what Romero hardwires into the use-conditions: that the speaker is sure p should enter the CG. Intuitively, a speaker who utters verum (p) signals that they are aware that an interlocutor believes ¬p, but they go ahead and assert p anyway. The assertion of p in the face of disagreement or controversy implicates that they are sure that p is true.
At this point, it is difficult to make a knock-down argument for hardwiring controversy, as opposed to speaker certainty. However, a potential advantage of the current analysis is that it is statable by referring to the commitment space development (the representation of the current state of the discourse). As such, it makes quite concrete predictions about when verum is and is not felicitous.
The current proposal also seems to fit the Gitksan data better than Gutzmann and Castroviejo Miró's (Reference Gutzmann, Miró, Bonami and Cabredo-Hofherr2011) QUD-based analysis, which appears to over-generate verum in answers to neutral polar questions (because any answer to a polar question downdates the QUD).
5.2 Implications and future research
One interesting consequence of viewing k'ap as verum relates to the way Gitksan expresses the concept of ‘but’. There is no dedicated connective for this, and English sentences containing ‘but’ are often translated using k'ap plus the ordinary clausal conjunction ii ‘and’, as in (62).
Viewing k'ap as verum allows us to account for its use in cases like (62) compositionally: this really is just conjunction plus verum, and the inherently contrastive nature of verum explains why a language without a dedicated ‘but’-conjunction would frequently add verum to its plain conjunction. This also correctly predicts that k'ap will not always be present in cases where English uses ‘but’, and conversely that it will be present in some cases where English uses ‘and’ or no conjunction at all; these facts are illustrated in (63)–(64) respectively.
I conclude by pointing out some issues for future research. One of these involves verum in embedded clauses, which I have not addressed here. Much of the literature similarly sets these aside; see Gutzmann (Reference Gutzmann, Blühdorn and Lohnstein2012), Lohnstein (Reference Lohnstein, Féry and Ishihara2016) for some discussion.
A second empirical domain for future research is wh-questions. Verum is acceptable inside wh-questions in English and German (e.g., Höhle Reference Höhle and Jacobs1992:118). K'ap has been accepted in wh-questions by all my consultants on at least one occasion, but it has never been volunteered, and it is sometimes rejected. There is also variation in judgments about where k'ap should appear syntactically (sentence-initially, between the wh-word and the ergative extraction marker, or between the ergative extraction marker and the verb). One example is given in (65), but further targeted empirical testing is required.
Imperatives are another clause type for future research. K'ap is not volunteered in imperatives, and there are variable judgments about its acceptability. The generalization seems to be that k'ap is acceptable in imperatives only in extreme cases of frustration or opposition. It is consistently dispreferred or rejected in contexts such as (66) (adapted from Gutzmann 2012:30), but is more likely to be accepted in contexts of repeated commands, as in (67). In this, k'ap seems to behave in a parallel fashion to verum marking in German, as reported by Gutzmann (see also Höhle Reference Höhle and Jacobs1992:118), but unlike English, which disallows verum in imperatives.
In one available discussion of verum in imperatives, Gutzmann and Castroviejo Miró (Reference Gutzmann, Miró, Bonami and Cabredo-Hofherr2011) propose that uttering an imperative raises the question of whether the addressee fulfills the order. For them, a verum-marked imperative signals that the speaker wants that question to be downdated. In the current analysis, a verum-marked imperative could signal that the speaker believes some interlocutor is committed to the proposition that the addressee will not fulfill the order.
Finally, future research should follow up on an intriguing type of data provided by Margaret Anderson (p.c.) for the related language Sm'algyax. Anderson observes that while many of the corpus examples of Sm'algyax k'ap seem to fit the generalizations given here for Gitksan, a subset of cases appear to contradict them. These involve the initial sentences of texts; one example is given in (68):
The analysis presented here does not predict the presence of a verum marker in the first sentence of a narrative. We do not have access to a large corpus of such narratives in Gitksan, but very preliminary attempts to elicit similar examples suggest that k'ap might indeed be acceptable here, just like in Sm'algyax. The narrative-initial examples tested so far were accepted by a consultant who nevertheless continues to robustly reject k'ap in the discourse-initial contexts discussed in section 3.1. If this pattern holds more generally, I will be forced to conclude that there is something special about the opening lines of traditional stories, such that for some reason they do not behave like pure ‘out-of-the-blue’ contexts. Further investigation is clearly required.
This article adds to a growing body of work which investigates the properties of discourse-sensitive elements using fieldwork data. It adds to the cross-linguistic landscape of verum constructions, by showing in detail that verum can be conveyed by an explicit morpheme rather than by focus-marking (see the references in section 5.1 for this proposal for some European languages, and Gutzmann et al. Reference Gutzmann, Hartmann and Matthewson2020 for the Chadic languages Bura and South Marghi). Finally, I hope that the comprehensive set of fieldwork tests illustrated in section 3 (see also Zimmermann and Hole Reference Zimmermann and Hole2008) will be useful to future researchers investigating verum(-like) elements in a range of languages.