“…Except for the two factors introduced above, the effect of language used by writers (Alonso-Almeida, 2015) and the cultural background of writers (Shui & Ji, 2015;Wang, 2016;Yang, Xu, & Liu, 2019) 66 concordances of these evidential markers appeared in the PICAE are collected and re-identified with three of the standards proposed by Anderson (1986), in which evidentials should be (i) the justification for a factual claim which is available to the person making that claim, whether direct evidence plus observation (no inference needed), evidence plus inference; inference (evidence unspecified), and reasoned expectation from logic and other facts; (ii) not the main predication; (iii) indication of evidence as their primary meaning. Since the criteria proposed by Anderson (1986) originally hold for grammatical evidentiality, the last criterion -never occurring as a derivational morpheme nor as an element in a compound-need not be considered when it is applied to lexical evidentiality.…”