A Grammar of Turkish Sign Language (TİD)

1steal3[lateral_high]                                                     

One of the signs that form non-specific indefinites is other [Lexicon - Section 3.6.2.]. other can function as an indefinite pronominal and it can combine with other signs to form more complex indefinites. Possible combinations are other^one^c_person ‘someone’ and one^other ‘someone’.

             

other one   c_person
‘someone’

(r. f. Kelepir et al. 2018a: 269)  

 

As mentioned above, these forms are used when the signer does not know the referent or has no referent in mind. Sentences with these forms can be followed by ‘… but I don't know who.’.  

 

Another sign that can also function as a non-specific indefinite pronoun is one[ipsi_up]. This sign has the same handshape as the numeral one but it is articulated by pointing the index finger towards the higher region of the (ipsi-) lateral signing space.

 

       

one[lateral_up]

'someone (non-specific & exclusive)'

(r. f. Kelepir et al. 2018a: 270)

 

For some signers, potential referents of these forms with other and one[lateral-high] exclude the addressee and also perhaps other people socially or physically close to the signer. Non-specific indefinite referents in contexts that involve, for instance, inappropriate acts such as throwing bottles into the sea, leaving trash on a desk, stealing, smoking etc., are expressed more frequently with these forms than with the more neutral forms such as the one^person c_person described in [Pragmatics - Section 1.3.1.] This exclusive reading is represented as ‘someone (non-specific, exclusive to our group)’ in the translations of the examples below. These examples have been adapted from Kelepir et al. (2018a: 268-274).

 

 

                                           non-sp 

 

one^other shoe 1steal3[lateral-high]

'Someone (non-specific, exclusive to our group) has stolen my shoe.'

(adapted from Kelepir et al. 2018a: 274)

 

                                                                                   non-sp

other^one^c_person sea water bottle throw fınısh

'Someone (non-specific, exclusive to our group) has thrown the water bottle 

into the sea.’ 

(adapted from Kelepir et al. 2018a: 268)

 

When an argument is non-specific indefinite (and exclusive in the sense explained above) and the verb is an agreement verb [Lexicon - Section 3.2.2.] that inflects for that argument, the agreement marker is also articulated in the higher region of the ipsilateral side of the signer.

 

 

          

1steal3[lateral_high]                                                     

'(Someone from outside) stole (it).'

(recreated from Kelepir et al. 2018b: 174)

 

When the signer assumes that the individuals who are present or nearby are in the set of potential referents, s/he articulates an indefinite sign or an agreement marker in the lower part of the central signing space. 

 

 

          

one[central_low] 

‘someone (from here)’

(recreated from Kelepir et al. 2018a: 270)

 

          

1steal3[central_low] 

‘(Someone from here) stole (it).’

 

 

(recreated from Kelepir et al. 2018b: 176)

 

 

An example of a context for the use of an inclusive indefinite is the following: The signer notices that her/his phone is missing, and s/he suspects that someone in that room stole the phone.

 

    non-spec

 

poss1 phone one^person 1steal3[center_low]

‘Someone (inclusive) has stolen my phone.’

List of editors

Meltem Kelepir

Copyright info

© 2020 Kadir Gökgöz, Aslı Göksel, Demet Kayabaşı, Meltem Kelepir, Onur Keleş, Okan Kubus, Aslı Özkul, A. Sumru Özsoy, Burcu Saral, Hande Sevgi, Süleyman S. Taşçı

Bibliographical reference for citation

The entire grammar:
Kelepir, Meltem (ed.). 2020. A Grammar of Turkish Sign Language (TİD). 1st ed. (SIGN-HUB Sign Language Grammar Series). (https://thesignhub.eu/grammar/tid) (Accessed 31-10-2021)

A Chapter:
LastName, FirstName. 2020. Syntax: 3. Coordination and Subordination. In Kelepir, Meltem (ed.). 2020. A Grammar of Turkish Sign Language (TİD). 1st ed. (SIGN-HUB Sign Language Grammar Series), 230-237. (https://thesignhub.eu/grammar/tid) (Accessed 31-10-2021)

A Section:
LastName, FirstName. 2020. Phonology: 1.1.1.2. Finger configuration. In Kelepir, Meltem (ed.). 2020. A Grammar of Turkish Sign Language (TİD). 1st ed. (SIGN-HUB Sign Language Grammar Series), 230-237. (https://thesignhub.eu/grammar/tid) (Accessed 31-10-2021)

LastName, FirstName. 2020. Syntax: 3.1.2.1.3. Manual markers in disjunctive coordination. In Kelepir, Meltem (ed.). 2020. A Grammar of Turkish Sign Language (TİD). 1st ed. (SIGN-HUB Sign Language Grammar Series), 230-237. (https://thesignhub.eu/grammar/tid) (Accessed 31-10-2021)