Linguocultural realization of epistemic modality in Uzbek and English: phraseological units, evidentiality, and cultural schemas

Authors

  • Uzbek state world languages university

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18879344
Linguocultural realization of epistemic modality in Uzbek and English: phraseological units, evidentiality, and cultural schemas

Abstract

This article examines how epistemic modality – the linguistic encoding of the speaker’s level of confidence, doubt, and (dis) belief in a proposition - is realized in Uzbek and English. The analysis combines the functional-semantic perspective of modality with a discussion of the evidential-epistemic boundary and a cultural-conceptual view of language as collective knowledge. The data set is drawn from literary discourse, primarily from the Uzbek novel “Shaytanat” by Tohir Malik and the English novel “The Godfather” by Mario Puzo, supplemented with illustrative examples fitting the genre. The units were categorized into three epistemic fields (certainty, doubt/suspicion, and uncertainty) and compared cross-linguistically. Results show that English typically marks epistemic stance through explicit lexical means – modal verbs, adverbs of manner, and first-person predicates (I think, I guess, probably), while Uzbek often favors indirect, interactionally sensitive strategies such as evidential verb forms, sentence-final particles (shekilli, bo‘lsa kerak), and culturally loaded fate-oriented expressions (Xudo xohlasa, nasib qilsa). These contrasts reflect different cultural schemas of knowledge, politeness, and responsibility in communication.

Keywords:

Epistemic modality evidentiality phraseology cultural conceptualization Uzbek English certainty doubt

References

de Haan, F. (1999). Evidentiality and epistemic modality: Setting boundaries. Southwest Journal of Linguistics. Retrieved November 16, 2025, from https://u.arizona.edu

Degen, J., Trotzke, A., Scontras, G., Wittenberg, E., & Goodman, N. D. (2019). Definitely, maybe: A new experimental paradigm for investigating the pragmatics of evidential devices across languages. Journal of Pragmatics, 140, 33-48. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pragma.2018.11.015

Hofstede, G., Hofstede, G. J., & Minkov, M. (2010). Cultures and organizations: Software of the mind (3rd ed.). New York, NY: McGraw-Hill.

Kroeger, P. (2019). Evidentiality and epistemic modality. In Analyzing meaning: An introduction to semantics and pragmatics. LibreTexts. Retrieved November 16, 2025, from https://socialsci.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/Linguistics/Analyzing_Meaning

Malik, T. (n.d.). Shaytanat [Novel]. Retrieved from www.ziyouz.com

Puzo, M. (1969). The godfather. New York, NY: G. P. Putnam’s Sons.

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Author Biography

Dilafruz Mamatsoli qizi Turakulova,
Uzbek state world languages university

Doctoral student

How to Cite

Turakulova, D. M. qizi. (2026). Linguocultural realization of epistemic modality in Uzbek and English: phraseological units, evidentiality, and cultural schemas. The Lingua Spectrum, 2(1), 149–155. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18879344