Jump to content

Quotation

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Aquotationis the repetition of a sentence, phrase, or passage from speech or text that someone has said or written.[1]In oral speech, it is the representation of an utterance (i.e. of something that a speaker actually said) that is introduced by a quotative marker, such as a verb of saying. For example: John said: "I saw Mary today". Quotations in oral speech are also signaled by specialprosodyin addition to quotative markers. In written text, quotations are signaled by quotation marks.[2]Quotations are also used to present well-known statement parts that are explicitly attributed bycitationto their original source; such statements are marked with (punctuatedwith)quotation marks.

As a form oftranscription,directorquoted speechis spoken or written text that reports speech or thought in its original form phrased by the original speaker. Innarrative,it is usually enclosed in quotation marks,[3]but it can be enclosed inguillemets(« ») in some languages. The cited speaker either is mentioned in the tag (or attribution) or is implied. Direct speech is often used as a literary device to represent someone's point of view. Quotations are also widely used in spoken language when an interlocutor wishes to present a proposition that they have come to know via hearsay.

Comparison between direct, indirect, and free indirect speech[edit]

  • Quotedordirect speech:[a]

Direct speechandindirect speechcan also refer to the difference between speech acts where theillocutionary forceis conveyed directly and indirectly, respectively. Thus, "What time is it?" is a direct speech act that might also be expressed by the indirect speech act "Do you know what time it is?"[5]

He laid down his bundle and thought of his misfortune. "And just what pleasure have I found since I came into this world?" he asked.
He laid down his bundle and thought of his misfortune. He asked himself what pleasure he had found since he came into the world.
He laid down his bundle and thought of his misfortune. And just what pleasure had he found since he came into this world?

A crucial semantic distinction between direct and indirect speech is that direct speech purports to report the exact words that were said or written, whereas indirect speech is a representation of speech in one's own words.[3]

The distinction between indirect speech and free indirect speech is mostly one of style, hence free indirect speech is sometimes described as a free indirect style.

As a literary device[edit]

A quotation can also refer to the repeated use of units of any other form of expression, especially parts of artistic works: elements of apainting,scenes from amovieor sections from amusical composition.

Reasons for using[edit]

Quotations are used for a variety of reasons: to illuminate the meaning or to support the arguments of the work in which it is being quoted, to provide direct information about the work being quoted (whether in order to discuss it, positively or negatively), to pay homage to the original work orauthor,to make the user of the quotation seem well-read, and/or to comply with copyright law.[6]Quotations are also commonly printed as a means of inspiration and to invoke philosophical thoughts from the reader. Pragmatically speaking, quotations can also be used as language games (in the Wittgensteinian sense of the term) to manipulate social order and the structure of society.[7][8]

Common sources[edit]

Famous quotations are frequently collected in books that are sometimes called quotation dictionaries or treasuries. Of these,Bartlett's Familiar Quotations,The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations,TheColumbiaDictionary of Quotations,The Yale Book of QuotationsandTheMacmillanBook of Proverbs, Maxims, and Famous Phrasesare considered among the most reliable and comprehensive sources. Diaries and calendars often include quotations for entertainment or inspirational purposes, and small, dedicated sections in newspapers and weekly magazines—with recent quotations by leading personalities on current topics—have also become commonplace.

Misquotations[edit]

Many quotations are routinely incorrect or attributed to the wrong authors, and quotations from obscure or unknown writers are often attributed to far more famous writers. Examples of this areWinston Churchill,to whom many political quotations of uncertain origin are attributed, andOscar Wilde,to whom anonymous humorous quotations are sometimes attributed.[9]

Some quotations commonly believed to be quotations from literature, film, etc. do not actually appear in the source material, but are paraphrases of phrases that do. TheStar Trekcatchphrase "Beam me up, Scotty"did not appear in that form in the original series. Other misquotations include"Just the facts, ma'am"(attributed toJack Webb's character ofJoe FridayonDragnet), "Heavy lies the crown" from Shakespeare's PlayHenry IV, Part 2,"Elementary, my dear Watson"(attributed toSherlock Holmes;it was, however, said in the filmsThe Adventures of Sherlock HolmesandThe Return of Sherlock Holmes), "Luke, I am your father"(attributed toDarth VaderinStar Wars), "Play it again, Sam"(attributed to Ilsa inCasablanca), "Do you feel lucky, punk?"(attributed toHarry CallahaninDirty Harry) and "We don't need no stinkin' badges!"(attributed to Gold Hat inThe Treasure of the Sierra Madre).[10][11][12][13]

Quotative inversion[edit]

Quotative inversion occurs in sentences where the direct quotation can occur before a verb of saying or after a verb of saying. It can trigger inversion of the verb and the verb'ssubject.Subject-verb inversion occurs most often in written works, being rare in speech.[14]Quotations may appear before the inverted verb, but can also appear after the subject,[15]such as:"I am going to follow you all the rest of my life," declared the man[15]andSaid the woman: "I see you with both my eyes."[15]

Syntax[edit]

In syntactic terms, these direct quotations can be presented in two forms. The first is as thecomplementof a quotative verb (e.g. Marie said: "My brother has arrived" ), and the second being as a head clause with a quotativeadjunct(e.g. "My brother has arrived", Marie announces).[2]Theverb phrasecan be further expanded to include a complement, such as: "They'll never make it!" cried Johnto Mary.Subjects must precede the complement, otherwise the structure formed will be ungrammatical (e.g. * "They'll never make it!" criedto MaryJohn).[14]Quotative inversion is only allowed when the verb is in thesimple presentor thesimple past.The most common pairing is the verbsaidwith anominalsubject, such as: "That's the whole trouble," said Gwen.[16]Additionally,noun phrasesare not permitted in addition to the subject when inversion takes place.[14]They are allowed only when there is no subject-verb inversion, or when part of a preposition phrase.[15]

a. "Why?" Gabrielle asked the attendant.[15]-No subject-verb inversion
b. "Why?" asked Gabrielle of the attendant.[15]-NP part of a preposition phrase
c.*"Why?" asked Gabrielle the attendant.[15]-Subject-verb inversion unlikely with an NP in addition to the subject

In English, both verb-subject and subject-verb word orders are permitted:

a. "Don't turn back!" warned Marcel.[14]-Verb-subject order
b. "Who's on first?" Swami demanded.[14]-Subject-verb order

This however, is not the case in all languages. For example, in Peninsular Spanish, this inversion is not allowed. Quotatives must follow verb-subject order:

a.«No, no es un enanito», rectifica el viejo.[17]-Verb-subject order
"No, he is not a gnome", corrects the old man.
b.*«No, no es un enanito», el viejo rectifica.[18]-Subject-verb order unlikely for introducing quotations
"No, he is not a gnome", the old man corrects.

Brackets in quotes in English language[edit]

Bracketsare used to indicate an addition or a modification from the original quote. Various uses of brackets in quotes are:[19]

  • Clarification ( "She[Michelle] is an expert in botany." )
  • Change in capitalization ( "[a]ccording to this article, this is untrue." )
  • Translation ( "Hola, soy Brandon [Hello, I am Brandon]." )

When "[sic] "is added, it means that errors are present in the original text. For example, "Domestic cats are valued by hoomans [sic] for companionship. "

In spoken discourse[edit]

Traditionally, quotations—more specifically known as direct quotations[20]—have been distinguished from indirect quotations. Direct quotations differ from indirect quotations in that they are reported from the perspective of the experiencer, while indirect quotations are reported from the perspective of the reporting speaker (e.g. "He said: 'I am leaving now'" versus "He said (that) he was leaving immediately" ); are free in their syntactic form, while indirect quotations are subject to language-specific structural requirements (e.g. indirect quotations in manyIndo-European languagesare required to have the syntactic form of awell-formeddeclarativesubordinate clause); incorporate extralinguistic material and pragmatic markers, while indirect quotations do not. Crucially, direct quotations have a performative aspect (i.e. occur simultaneously with re-enactments of previous behaviours), which indirect quotations lack.[21][20]

Both direct and indirect quotations in spoken discourse are not intended to beverbatimreproductions of an utterance that has been produced. Instead, direct quotations convey the approximative meaning of such an utterance along with the way in which that utterance was produced. From asociolinguisticperspective, a direct quotation in spoken discourse can therefore also be defined as "a performance whereby speakers re-enact previous behaviour (speech/thought/sound/voice effect and gesture) while assuming the dramatic role of the original source of this reported behaviour".[21]Indirect quotations are simply paraphrases of something that a reporting speaker heard.[22]

Reasons for using[edit]

Quotations are employed in spoken discourse for many reasons. They are often used by speakers to depict stories and events that have occurred in the past to otherinterlocutors.The speaker does not necessarily have to have been an original participant in the story or event. Therefore, they can quote something that they did not hear firsthand. Quotations are also used to express thoughts that have never been uttered aloud prior to being quoted. For example, while telling a story, a speaker quotes inner thoughts that they had during a specific situation. Finally, speakers use quotations to propose future dialogue for participants in a situation that may take place in the future. For example, two friends talk about their 10-year high school reunion that will take place in the future and propose what they would say. While future dialogue can be proposed for a situation that will likely happen, it can also be based on a situation that will not actually take place. In the latter usage, the proposed dialogue only exists in the conversational context.[23]

The quoted material is usually not a verbatim replication of an utterance that someone originally said. Instead, quotations in spoken discourse reproduce what a speaker wishes to communicate to their recipients; quotations demonstrate something that someone said, the manner in which that person said it, and the current speaker’s feelings about what was said.[23][20]In this way, quotations are an especially effective storytelling device; the speaker is able to give a voice to the protagonists in their stories themselves, which allows the speaker’s audience to experience the situation in the way that the speaker themselves experienced it.[21]

Form[edit]

In most languages, quotations in spoken discourse are introduced by averb of sayingand apronoun.For example, a quotation in English can be introduced by "She said". In some languages, there is adiscourse markerin addition to the verb of saying that functions as verbal quotation marks.[22]For example, Japanese uses the quotative particle (a type of quotative marker)toalong with theconjugatedverb of sayingitta:

ゆき

Yuki

Yuki

wa

TOP

あなた

anata

you

には

ni wa

DAT(TOP)

Bỉ nữ

kanojo

her

ga

NOM

Hảo き

suki

like

to

COM

Ngôn った.

itta.

said

ゆき は あなた には bỉ nữ が hảo きNgôn った.

Yuki wa anata {ni wa} kanojo ga sukitoitta.

Yuki TOP you {DAT (TOP)} her NOM like COM said

"Yuki said that you liked her."

Verbs of saying (known as quotative verbs when used to introduce quotations) and quotative particles are used as quotative markers, which signal quotations in utterances.[22]Quotative evidentials are also used in some languages to indicate quoted speech (e.g.Cusco Quechuaspoken in Peru,Nantispoken in lowland southeastern Peru,Laalspoken in Chad).[24][25][26]

Quotative markers[edit]

Quotative markers are used to mark a section of an utterance as quoted speech (i.e. a quotation). In oral speech, quotative markers act as quotation marks and often include a verb of saying (e.g.say). A quotative marker usually appears either before or after the reported speech or thought, depending on thesyntaxof the language.[22]For example, compare the following languages:

English[edit]

In English, the quotative verbsayoccurs before the quotation:[22]

a. Shesaid"Will you answer the phone, will you answer the phone"[27]

In American English, verbs such asbe like,go,andbe allare non-standard quotatives that are commonly used incolloquial speech.[22][28]They are observed in the speech of young people not only in American English, but in othervarietiesof English as well (e.g.be likein New Zealand English,[29]be likeandgoinGlasgowEnglish[28]).[27][28]Though not semantically considered verbs of saying, they are used to convey the same meaning as such verbs. Likesay,be like,go,andbe alloccur before the quotation:[22]

b. I'mlike"I'm so sorry you had to wait"[27]
c. Shewent"Who are you going with?"[28]
d. He's all"Okay, come with me come with me"[28]

In conversational speech, the use ofsayandbe likeoccurs at about the same frequency,[27]thoughsaytends to be used in more formal contexts (e.g. office hours between professors and students) andbe liketends to occur in more informal contexts (e.g. a conversation between two young people).[28]

In African American Vernacular English,talkin' 'boutoccurs as a verb of quotation, introducing both direct and indirect quotes, as in:

e. They cometalkin' 'boutthey is scared ofme![30][31]
Japanese[edit]

In Japanese, the quotative particletoalong with the verb of sayingiu(say) occur after the quotation; the conjugated form ofiu(say) isitta:[22]

Quá lang

Taro

Taro

wa

TOP

Tình hải

Harumi

Harumi

o

ACC

Ghét んでいる

nikundeiru

hated

to

COM

Ngôn った.

itta.

said

Quá lang は tình hải を ghét んでいるNgôn った.

Taro wa Harumi o nikundeirutoitta.

Taro TOP Harumi ACC hated COM said

"Taro said that he hated Harumi."lit."that 'I hated Harumi'"

The quotative particletocan also occur with verbs of thinking, such asomou(think). Liketoandiu(say),toandomouoccur after the quotation.

Laal[edit]

InLaal,the quotative evidentialmɨ́is used for non-self quotation[26](i.e. quotation in which the speaker quotes someone else, not themself); it is used with a quotative verbɓɨ́lá.The use ofmɨ́results in an indirect quotation translation. The quotative verbbɨ́láoccurs before the quotation, while the quotative evidentialmɨ́occurs within the quoted speechjá mɨ́ nyàg tāā wó:

ài

He

ɓɨ́lá

say

mɨ́

(say)that

*i/j

I

mɨ́

QEV

nyàg

eat

tāā

fish

NEG

àiɓɨ́lámɨ́ já*i/jmɨ́nyàg tāā wó

Hesay(say)that IQEVeat fish NEG

"Heisaid that I*i/jdon't/didn't eat fish. "

As the above sentence involves a non-self quotation,à(he) and(I) have different indices to show that they refer to differentreferents;only this interpretation iswell-formed.The interpretation in which they share identical indices is ill-formed (i.e. ungrammatical), as indicated by the asterisk.

In addition to quotative markers, speakers also useprosodicshifts, pauses, pronominal choices, andtenseto detect the occurrence and boundaries of quotations in spoken utterances.[22]

Syntax[edit]

Different versions of quotative verbs, particles, and evidentials can be used to express the same idea with varying nuances, often to frame how the primary speaker, or the person who is quoting, feels about a quotation. The syntax of quotations varies cross-linguistically. A primary speaker may use the tense and linguistic idiosyncrasies of the speech at the time it was uttered in a quotation, independent from the tense in the main clause in some languages, or use the same tense in both the main clause and quotation in other languages. They will also usecoreferencedpronouns to the direct quotation's first-person subject in the main clause: Shexsaid, "Ix... "; theyysaid "wey... "In many languages, the primary speaker may also attempt to quote an utterance in the same language the original speaker used, even if an interlocutor does not understand it; however, it is mainly context-dependent such as when telling stories.[33][34][35]

Quotative verbs[edit]

Quotative verbs are lexical verbs that indicate the speech, thoughts, or perceptions of the original speaker.[33][34]

Quotations can be introduced as the complement to a quotative verb or as the head phrase to an adjunct phrase containing a quotative verb in some languages like English and French.[2][35]

Quotation as complement Quotation as head phrase adjunct[2]
English Marie said, "My brother has arrived." "My brother has arrived," Marie said.
French Marie a dit, "Mon frère est arrivé." "Mon frère est arrivé," comme a dit Marie.

English also displaysverb-second(V2) order vestige only in quotation contexts (quotative inversion), requiring the finite verb to appear in the second position of a clause. For example: "No no no"saysHarry.[35]

Direct and indirect quotations are sometimes not distinguishable. Traditionally, English uses an overt complementizerthatafter a quotative verb to indicate indirect quotation, but it is also seen to prompt direct quotation in some English varieties like Indian English, Hong Kong English, and Kenyan English.

Hong Kong English After the movie I justsaid that"Oh Frank I cannot walk."[35]
Indian English Never a husbandsays that"I'll make a cup of tea okay, you sit. I'll make a cup of tea."
Kenyan English So Kabuwe Abuwetoldusthat"If it is for wedding I am not going to contribute."
Quotative verb "be like" in English.

The newer quotative verbbe likein English is used to only introduce direct quotations.Be likeincludes the use of the demonstrativethat,which is null in most English varieties, but can be optionally overt in some varieties like Glasgow English. Dutch's quotative verbhebben zoiets vanhas a similar structure to Standard American English in that it has a null demonstrative that precedes the quotation. It differs from the English structures in that it uses an overt quantifierzoietsto bewell-formed.[36]

Standard North American English Glasgow English Dutch[36]
[TPAaron [T'was [PPlike [DP[QUOTEI hate you]]]]] [TPAaron [T'was [PPlike [DP[QUOTEI hate you]]]]] [TPIk [T'hebben [DPzoiets[PPvan [DP[QUOTEI hate you]]]]]
*[TPAaron [T'was [PPlike [DPthat[QUOTEI hate you]]]]] [TPAaron [T'was [PPlike [DPthat[QUOTEI hate you]]]]] *[TPIk [T'hebben [DP[PPvan [DP[QUOTEI hate you]]]]]

Quotative particles[edit]

Quotative or hearsay particles are grammatical markers equivalent to full lexical verbs with meanings of"say, mention, tell, etc."In many languages, they aregrammaticalizedto different extremes from their previously lexical form. Common patterns of grammaticalization trajectories include verb to complementizer in many African and Asian languages and verb totense-aspect-moodmarkers primarily in African languages, but also in Australian languages and multiple otherlanguage families.[35][37]

Quotative Particle "-tte" and "to" in Japanese.

Japanese, for example, uses a sentence-final quotative particletteverbally to mean "I heard (quote)" with some uncertainty. In sentence-medial position,tteis sometimes regarded along withtoto be either a quotative particle or complementizer meaning "I heard (quote)" with less uncertainty and often more knowledge of the origin of the quote.

Ngày mai

ashita

tomorrow

Tình れる

hareru

will-be-fine

-って

tte.

QUOT

Ngày mai tình れる -って

ashita harerutte.

tomorrow will-be-fine QUOT

"It will be fine tomorrow, I heard."

Ngày mai

ashita

tomorrow

Tình れる

hareru

will-be-fine

って/

-tte/to

QUOT

Ngôn ってた

itteta

said

yo.

FP

Ngày mai tình れるって/Ngôn ってた よ

ashita hareru-tte/toitteta yo.

tomorrow will-be-fine QUOT said FP

"(X) said that it would be fine tomorrow."

Verbs of saying are highly restricted in Australian languages and almost always immediately proceed the complement verb.

Ngarinyinexample

wurlan

word

wurr-u-miyangga

3PL-FUT-know

bud-ma-ra-ngarrugu

3PL-say-PST-1PL.OBL.IRR

wurlan wurr-u-miyangga bud-ma-ra-ngarrugu

word 3PL-FUT-know 3PL-say-PST-1PL.OBL.IRR

"They will know this word" they said to us.

Quotative evidentials[edit]

Quotative or hearsay evidentials provide knowledge of who or where information originated from in speech based on logical assumption. Languages indicate this in various ways: through grammatical marking, additional words and phrases, prosody, gestures, or systematic affixes of verbs. Quotative readings of evidentials are typologically rare. For example, English can express evidentials with an optional adverb, "Allegedly,Annie pulled the trigger. "The interlocutor then knows the source of the quotation is from elsewhere, but this is not a quotative reading as there is no direct performative quoting or verbs of saying. Languages including Cusco Quechua, Kham, Tagalog, and Kaalallisut are documented as containing quotative evidentials. In languages with" true "quotative evidentials (which usually introduce quoted statements), it is also possible for them to occur with interrogatives and imperatives, yielding quoted interrogatives and quoted imperatives.[24][38]Similar to quotative particles, quotative evidentials are usuallygrammaticalizedfrom full lexical verbs.[39]

Nhêengatú,a Tupí-Guaranílingua francaof North-West Amazonia, has a reported evidential markerpaá.An example scenario is as follows: X saw John go fishing. Mary then and asks X where John went. X replies "u-sú u-piniatika" (he went fishing). Later, Peter asks Mary where John went. She replies to Peter that she did not see John go herself, but rather heard it from a different source using the evidential marker "u-sú u-piniatikapaá."[40]

u-sú

3SG-go

u-piniatika

3SG-fish

paá

REP

u-sú u-piniatikapaá

3SG-go 3SG-fishREP

"He went fishing (they say/I was told)"

Quotative Evidential "=si" in Cusco Quechua.

Tagalog'squotative evidentials are used with imperative quotations.[24]

kumain

eat.INF

(ka)

(you)

daw

REP

kumain (ka)daw

eat.INF (you)REP

Someone said: Eat!

Cusco Quechua's quotative evidential comes as a derivation of aclitic,=si,for interrogative quotations.[24]

pi-ta=s

who-ACC=REP

Inés-qa

Inés-TOP

watuku-sqa

visit-PST

pi-ta=sInés-qa watuku-sqa

who-ACC=REPInés-TOP visit-PST

'Someone said: Who did Inés visit?'

Hand gesture[edit]

Hand gesturing a quotation in a conversation can be done withair quotes.[41]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^abcBoth direct speech and indirect speech purport to report the speech or thoughts of an original speaker. Some writers use the termsreported direct speechandreported indirect speech[4]

References[edit]

  1. ^McArthur, Tom; Lam-McArthur, Jacqueline; Fontaine, Lisa, eds. (2018).The Oxford Companion to the English Language(2nd ed.). Oxford University Press.ISBN9780191744389.
  2. ^abcdBonami, Olivier; Godard, Danièle (2008)."On the Syntax of Direct Quotation in French".HAL.Retrieved10 April2020.
  3. ^abLeech, Geoffrey (2006).A Glossary of English Grammar.Edinburgh University Press. pp.34,101.ISBN978-0-7486-1729-6.
  4. ^Huddleston, Rodney;Pullum, Geoffrey(2002).The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language.Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 1023–1030.ISBN0-521-43146-8.Direct reported speechpurports to give the actual wording of the original, whereasindirect reported speechgives only its content....[Note:] Some writers omit the 'reported' and simply talk of 'direct speech' and 'indirect speech', while others restrict the term 'reported speech' to the indirect type; we believe, however, that it is useful to have a term for covering both. Further alternative terms for direct and indirect reported speech are 'oratio recta' and 'oratio obliqua', respectively.
  5. ^Huddleston, Rodney;Pullum, Geoffrey(2002).The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language.Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 861–865.ISBN0-521-43146-8.
  6. ^"English Grammar Lesson - Using Quotes! - ELC".ELC - English Language Center.16 November 2016.Retrieved24 October2017.
  7. ^Capone, A., & Salmani Nodoushan, M. A. (2014). On indirect reports and language games: Evidence from Persian. Rivista Italiana di Filosofia del Linguaggio, 8(2), 26-42.
  8. ^Salmani Nodoushan, M. A. (2015). The secret life of slurs from the perspective of reported speech. Rivista Italiana di Filosofia del Linguaggio, 9(2), 92-112.
  9. ^SeeA Book of Misquotations,edited by Elizabeth Knowles, Oxford University Press, 2006.
  10. ^The Holmes phrase originated in a radio play. SeeList of misquotationsand"Elementary, My Dear Watson"at Snopes
  11. ^Webbdidsay: "All we want are the facts ma'am". SeeJust the facts, ma'am,List of misquotationsand"Just the Facts"at Snopes
  12. ^Greatest Film Misquotes - Part 2,Tim Dirks at filmsite.org
  13. ^We Dont Need No Stinkin Badges!onYouTubealthough the last of these is spoken by one of the Mexican Bandits that Hedley Lamarr attempts to hire as mercenaries inBlazing Saddles
  14. ^abcdeCollins, Chris; Branigan, Phil (February 1997). "Quotative Inversion".Natural Language & Linguistic Theory.15(1): 1–41.doi:10.1023/A:1005722729974.S2CID189899706.
  15. ^abcdefgBruening, Benjamin (15 April 2016). "Alignment in Syntax: Quotative Inversion in English".Syntax.19(2): 113.doi:10.1111/synt.12121.
  16. ^Cichosz, Anna (March 2019)."Parenthetical reporting clauses in the history of English: the development of quotative inversion".English Language and Linguistics.23(1): 183–214.doi:10.1017/S1360674317000594.S2CID125456450.Retrieved17 April2020.
  17. ^Suñer, Margarita (August 2000). "The Syntax of Direct Quotes with Special Reference to Spanish and English".Natural Language & Linguistic Theory.18(3): 532.JSTOR4047939.
  18. ^Matos, Gabriel (2013)."Quotative Inversion in Peninsular Portuguese and Spanish, and in English".Catalan Journal of Linguistics.12:112.doi:10.5565/rev/catjl.86.hdl:10451/32653.
  19. ^"When to Use Brackets in Quotes: Your Punctuation Guide - UoPeople".5 May 2021.
  20. ^abcClark, Herbert; Gerrig, Richard (December 1990). "Quotations as Demonstrations".Language.66(4): 764–805.doi:10.2307/414729.JSTOR414729.S2CID143541258.
  21. ^abcBuchstaller, Isabelle (2014).Quotatives: New Trends and Sociolinguistic Implications(1st ed.). Wiley Blackwell.ISBN9780470657188.
  22. ^abcdefghijTracy, Karen, ed. (2015).The international encyclopedia of language and social interaction.Wiley Blackwell. pp. 1272–1276.ISBN9781118611463.
  23. ^abSams, Jessie (November 2010)."Quoting the unspoken: An analysis of quotations in spoken discourse".Journal of Pragmatics.42(11): 3147–3160.doi:10.1016/j.pragma.2010.04.024.Retrieved11 April2020.
  24. ^abcdefKorotkova, Natasha (2017)."Evidentials and (relayed) speech acts: hearsay as quotation".Proceedings of SALT 25.25:676–694.doi:10.3765/salt.v25i0.3969.
  25. ^LaPolla, Randy; De Busser, Rik, eds. (2015).Language Structure and Environment.John Benjamins. pp. 99–103.
  26. ^abcLionnet, Florian."More than reported speech: Quotative evidentiality in Laal"(PDF).Retrieved19 April2020.
  27. ^abcdFrederica Barbieri.Quotative Use in American English,Journal of English Linguistics, Vol. 33/No.3, September 2005.
  28. ^abcdefAhrenholz, Bernt; Bredel, Ursula; Klein, Wolfgang; Rost-Roth, Martina; Skiba, Romuald, eds. (2008).Empirische Forschung und Theoriebildung.Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang. pp. 117–128.ISBN978-3-631-56930-6.
  29. ^King, Brian (2010).""All us girls were like euuh!": Conversational work of be like in New Zealand adolescent talk ".New Zealand English Journal.24:17–36.Retrieved19 April2020.
  30. ^Jones, Taylor (1 December 2016)."AAE Talmbout: An Overlooked Verb of Quotation".University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics.22(2).
  31. ^Cukor-Avila, Patricia (2002)."She say, She go, She be like: Verbs of Quotation over Time in African American Vernacular English".American Speech.77(1): 3–31.doi:10.1215/00031283-77-1-3.ISSN1527-2133.S2CID143904503.
  32. ^Florian Coulmas (Ed.).Direct and Indirect Speech (Trends in Linguistics: Studies and Monographs),p.164.ISBN978-3110105995
  33. ^abEvans, Nicholas (2012). "Some problems in the typology of quotation: a canonical approach".Canonical Morphology and Syntax.Oxford University Press.
  34. ^abKlamer, Marian (2000)."How report verbs become quote markers and complementisers".Lingua.110(2): 69–98.doi:10.1016/S0024-3841(99)00032-7.hdl:1887/18278.Retrieved13 April2020.
  35. ^abcdefD'Arcy, Alexandra (2015)."Quotation and advances in understanding syntactic systems".Annual Review of Linguistics.1(1): 43–61.doi:10.1146/annurev-linguist-030514-125220.
  36. ^abHaddican, William; Zweig, Eytan; Johnson, Daniel Ezra (2012)."The syntax of be like quotatives"(PDF).Proceedings of the 29th West Coast Conference on Formal Linguistics:81–89.
  37. ^abcMatsui, Tomoko; Yamamoto, Taeko (2013)."Developing sensitivity to the sources of information: Early use of the Japanese quotative particles tte and to in mother–child conversation".Journal of Pragmatics.59:5–25.doi:10.1016/j.pragma.2013.06.008.Retrieved13 April2020.
  38. ^San Roque, Lila (2019)."Evidentiality".Annual Review of Anthropology.48:353–370.doi:10.1146/annurev-anthro-102218-011243.
  39. ^Chojnicka, Joanna. "Latvian verbs of speaking and their relations to evidentiality".Kalbotyra(69): 59–81.
  40. ^abAikhenvald, Alexandra Y (2014). The grammar of knowledge: a cross-linguistic view of evidentials, and the expression of information source. Oxford University Press. p.4-5.ISBN9780198701316
  41. ^Martin, Gary."Air quotes".The Phrase Finder.Archivedfrom the original on 3 November 2008.Retrieved18 November2008.