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Dieser Vortrag stellt Kriterien der Auswahl von deutsch-tschechischen und tschechisch-deutschen Teilkorpora für die Analyse der deutsch-tschechischen Wortstellungsunterschiede, einen Kommentar zur Analyse der Dependenzgrammatik und der Thema-Rhema-Gliederung und die Veröffentlichung einiger Erkenntnisse dieser Forschungsarbeit vor.
Manfred Franks hermeneutische Zeichentheorie im Kontext der neuesten diskursanalytischen Ansätze
(2017)
Es werden heute im Rahmen der germanistischen Diskursanalyse weitreichende Diskussionen über die anzuwendende Bedeutungs- und Sprachwandeltheorie geführt, sowie auch Fragen gestellt nach dem epistemologischen Status der zu beschreibenden Diskursstrukturen und nach der Rolle der individuellen und sozialen Faktoren innerhalb der Prozesse der Diskurskonstitution. Die inhaltsorientierten Linguisten dieser Strömung befassen sich also mit den Themen, die von einem der bedeutendsten deutschen Sprachtheoretiker Manfred Frank bearbeitet wurden, und zwar in Auseinandersetzungen mit denjenigen strukturalistisch geprägten Forschern und Sprachphilosophen, von denen die zeitgenössischen Diskurstheoretiker maßgeblich beeinflusst sind. Mein Beitrag beabsichtigt, Franks sprachtheoretischen Ansatz in der laufenden Debatte unter den Diskursanalytikern hypothetisch zu verorten.
Die soziokultivierte (effiziente) Kommunikation hängt von der Motivationswelt (von den Erfahrungen, Einstellungen, Bedürfnissen, Werten, Interessen usw.) der einzelnen Kommunikationsakteure und von der Erhaltung der Proportionalität zwischen den Akkommodations- und Assimilationsprozessen in der Kommunikation ab. Bei der Durchsetzung der Motivationswelt der Kommunikationsakteure spielt in einigen Kommunikationssituationen "die Beschäftigung" mit dem Kollektivgedächtnis eine bedeutende Rolle, d.h. welche Erinnerungen werden und in welchem Ausmaß aus dem Kollektivgedächtnis herausgezogen, und welche bleiben zielbewusst deaktiviert. Diese Tatsache bestätigt auch die linguistische Analyse der Äußerungen, die auf die Persönlichkeit von Ferdinand Porsche zielen.
Im vorliegenden Beitrag werden Ergebnisse einer kontrastiv angelegten deutsch-tschechischen Analyse von ausgewählten Ratgeber- und Diskussionsforen präsentiert, die auf eine konkrete Hauterkrankung namens Pityriasis rosea Gibert (dt. Röschenflechte) ausgerichtet sind. Die Aufmerksamkeit wird auf den Gebrauch einschlägiger medizinischer Terminologie einerseits durch Ärzte und andererseits durch Patienten und deren Angehörige gerichtet, wobei der Frage nachgegangen wird, welche außer- sowie innersprachlichen Faktoren die Verwendung der medizinischen Terminologie beeinflussen und welche kontextuellen Modifizierungen diese erfährt. Anhand eines interlingualen Vergleichs wird demonstriert, welche Ausdrücke im 'terminologischen Zentrum' und welche an der 'terminologischen Peripherie' bei den Usern solcher Foren in den beiden Sprachen stehen und ob diesbezüglich irgendwelche Unterschiede feststellbar sind.
Um die zentralen Spracherscheinungen von den peripheren unterscheiden zu können, braucht man sprachliche Daten. Nicht nur aus dem Bedürfnis heraus, authentische Beispiele einfach und schnell finden zu können, greift man heutzutage nach Textkorpora unterschiedlicher Art. Im Beitrag wird am Beispiel des deutschen Verbs lassen gezeigt, wie man sich ein Parallelkorpus bei prachvergleichenden Analysen zu Nutze machen kann und wie man die Korpusbelege auswertet, um die zentralen Phänomene des jeweiligen Sprachsystems hervorzuheben.
Die Sprache kann mit einem Schachspiel verglichen werden: Einerseits ist der jeweilige Spielstand ein System, in dem einzelne Figuren in einer bestimmten Relation zu anderen Figuren stehen. Darüber hinaus aber ist jedes Spiel ein dynamischer Vorgang, in dem aufgrund von Spielregeln und der Strategie der Spieler permanent neue Spielstände erreicht werden. In diesem Sinn hat das Sprachspiel systemischen Charakter. Das Prinzip von Zentrum und Peripherie kennzeichnet auch das System des Sprachspiels. Das Sprachspiel ist also ein Gebilde mit einem kompakten Kern und einer diffusen Peripherie, die in die Peripherie einer oppositiven Kategorie oder Klasse übergeht. Die Kategorien oder Klassen des Sprachspiels sind aber nicht oppositive Einheiten mit jeweils bestimmten Merkmalen. Die Kategorien des Sprachspiels sind vielmehr Situationen, in denen sich Texte gewissermaßen 'bewähren' müssen, also Situationen, die von Texten bewältigt werden müssen. Dies betrifft sowohl die Produktion als auch die Rezeption von Texten.
This thesis investigated the acquisition of restrictive and appositive interpretations of relative clauses in German-speaking children between the age of 3 and 6 in three experiments.
The theoretical background shows that restrictive relative clauses are semantically less complex than appositive ones. This assumption is supported by observations from a typological overview on the semantic functions attested across languages. It is shown that the existence of appositive relative clauses implies the availability of restrictive readings in a given language. Furthermore, restrictive readings may be favored due to the functioning of general processing principles. Previous research on the acquisition of relative clauses demonstrates that the acquisition of the semantic functions of relative clauses is an understudied area. In contrast, the acquisition of syntactic aspects of relative clauses is well documented. Relative clauses start to be produced in the third year of life and can be interpreted target-like between the age of 4 and 8 depending on their structure. Which semantic interpretation children assign to relative clauses at this age, however, is still an open question.
Based on the formal background and insights from previous studies, three experiments were designed: two picture selection tasks and one acceptability task. The crucial aspect of the experimental design constitutes the interaction of an ordinal number word and the interpretation of the relative clause in sentences like “Take the third car(,) that/which is red”. The scope of the ordinal number reveals whether the relative clause had been attached restrictively at the NP-level or whether it had been attached higher up at the DP shell resulting in an appositive interpretation.
The results of the experiments demonstrate that 4- to 6-year-old German-speaking children and adults prefer restrictive readings over appositive ones. This preference is found within the group data and is mirrored by the results of an individual analysis. In addition, while the majority of children has acquired restrictive readings at the age of 4, appositive interpretations are mastered only by about half of the children between age 4 and 6. Interestingly, 3-year-old children show a different pattern than their older peers. Appositive but not restrictive interpretations seem to be available to these children. Although the results may be taken as evidence that appositivity is acquired before restrictivity in relative clauses by German-speaking children, I propose the contrary. Based on assumptions about the complexity of restrictive and appositive derivations, I argue that the appositive interpretations observed at the age of 3 do not result from a target-like syntactic and semantic representation. I propose that 3-year-old children do not yet identify relative clauses as nominal modifiers. Instead, they are derived from an incorrect attachment of the relative clause higher up in the syntactic tree.
The results of the three experiments are the first to show that neither a prototypical unintegrated prosodic contour nor the presence of a lexical marker, the discourse particle “ja”, or a visual context biasing for appositivity led to an increase of appositive interpretations in the children’s groups. Adults, in contrast, were sensitive to the presence of the discourse particle and the cues from the visual context. As for children, the prosodic format of the relative clauses did not systematically change the interpretation preferences of adults.
The proposed acquisition path may not be specific to German. Instead, it is predicted to hold cross-linguistically and may also be transferred to the interpretation of adjectives. Moreover, the assumptions on how children integrate relative clauses during comprehension may be generalized to other types of subordinate clauses.
The frequency of intensional and non-first-order definable operators in natural languages constitutes a challenge for automated reasoning with the kind of logical translations that are deemed adequate by formal semanticists. Whereas linguists employ expressive higher-order logics in their theories of meaning, the most successful logical reasoning strategies with natural language to date rely on sophisticated first-order theorem provers and model builders. In order to bridge the fundamental mathematical gap between linguistic theory and computational practice, we present a general translation from a higher-order logic frequently employed in the linguistics literature, two-sorted Type Theory, to first-order logic under Henkin semantics. We investigate alternative formulations of the translation, discuss their properties, and evaluate the availability of linguistically relevant inferences with standard theorem provers in a test suite of inference problems stated in English. The results of the experiment indicate that translation from higher-order logic to first-order logic under Henkin semantics is a promising strategy for automated reasoning with natural languages.
Anankastic relatives
(2016)
This dissertation investigates a semantic puzzle in German concerning certain sentences with an intensional transitive verb and a modalized relative clause modifying its indefinite object. In their unspecific reading, the modal inside the relative clause seems to lack a semantic contribution and the construal of the relative clause appears spuriously ambiguous between a restrictive and an appositive reading. However, as a thorough discussion of a wide range of data reveals, the embedded modal is actually anaphoric to the matrix attitude and does contribute to the sentence meaning. But then, precisely due to its anaphoricity, this semantic contribution is restricted and in some cases very subtle; in particular, the semantic phenomenon under scrutiny cannot be analyzed as an instance of modal concord. Rather, previous observations on related data involving epistmic anaphoric modals and anankastic conditionals turn out to indicate the direction for an adequate analysis of the relevant semantic observations. For the restrictive construal, a conservative account is developed containing a fine-grained Lewis-Kratzer-style modal semantics, but with a twist: the anaphoricity of the modal is taken care of by restricting the anaphoricity of the modal to the ordering source of the matrix verb; moreover, the embedded modal receives a historical modal base. In this way compositionality issues and problems of cross-identification are avoided. Finally, the non-restrictive construal is analyzed as an instance of modal subordination, exploiting the well-studied parallel between appositive relatives and discourse anaphora.
This dissertation provides a comprehensive account of the grammar of relative clause extraposition in English. Based on a systematic review and evaluation of the empirical generalizations and theoretical approaches provided in the literature on generative grammar, it is shown that none of the previous theories is able to account for all the relevant facts. Among the most problematic data are the Principle C and scope effects of relative clause extraposition, cases with obligatory relative clauses, and relative clauses with elliptical NPs as antecedents.
I propose a new analysis of relative clause extraposition within the constraint-based, monostratal grammatical framework of Head-driven Phrase Structure Grammar (HPSG), enhanced with the semantic theory of Lexical Resource Semantics (LRS). Crucially, it is a general analysis of relative clause attachment, since both canonical and extraposed relative clauses are licensed by the same syntactic and semantic constraints. The basic assumption is that a relative clause can be adjoined to any phrase that contains a suitable antecedent of the relative pronoun. The semantic information that licenses the relative clause is introduced by the determiner of the antecedent NP. The techniques of underspecified semantics and the standard semantic representation language used by LRS make it possible to formulate constraints which yield the correct intersective interpretation of the relative clause (arbitrarily distant from its antecedent NP) and at the same time link the scope of the antecedent NP to the adjunction site of the relative clause.
In combination with the revised HPSG binding theory developed in this dissertation, the proposed analysis is able to capture the major properties of relative clause attachment within a unified and internally consistent monostratal constraint-based grammatical framework.
Previous studies suggest that the application of Controlled Language (CL) rules can significantly improve the readability, consistency, and machine-translatability of source text. One of the justifications for the application of CL rules is that they can have a similar impact on several target languages by reducing the post-editing effort required to bring Machine Translation (Ml’) output to acceptable quality. In certain situations, however, post-editing services may not always be a viable solution. Web-based information is often expected to be made available in real-time to ensure that its access is not restricted to certain users based on their locale. Uncertainties remain with regard to the actual usefulness of MT output for such users, as no empirical study has examined the impact of CL rules on the usefulness, comprehensibility, and acceptability of MT technical documents from a Web user's perspective. In this study, a two-phase approach is used to determine whether Controlled English rules can have a significant impact on these three variables. First, individual CL rules are evaluated within an experimental environment, which is loosely based on a test suite.Two documents are then published and subject to a randomised evaluation within the framework of an online experiment using a customer satisfaction questionnaire. The findings indicate that a limited number of CL rules have a similar impact on the comprehensibility of French and German output at the segment level. The results of the online experiment show that the application of certain CL rules has the potential to significantly improve the comprehensibility of German MT technical documentation. Our findings also show that the introduction of CL rules did not lead to any significant improvement of the comprehensibility, usefulness, and acceptability of French MT technical documentation.
The Shared Task on Source and Target Extraction from Political Speeches (STEPS) first ran in 2014 and is organized by the Interest Group on German Sentiment Analysis (IGGSA). This volume presents the proceedings of the workshop of the second iteration of the shared task. The workshop was held at KONVENS 2016 at Ruhr-University Bochum on September 22, 2016.
As in the first edition of the shared task the main focus of STEPS was on fine-grained sentiment analysis and offered a full task as well as two subtasks for the extraction Subjective Expressions and/or their respective Sources and Targets.
In order to make the task more accessible, the annotation schema was revised for this year’s edition and an adjudicated gold standard was used for the evaluation. In contrast to the pilot task, this iteration provided training data for the participants, opening the Shared Task for systems based on machine learning approaches.
The gold standard1 as well as the evaluation tool2 have been made publicly available to the research community via the STEPS’ website.
We would like to thank the GSCL for their financial support in annotating the 2014 test data, which were available as training data in this iteration. A special thanks also goes to Stephanie Köser for her support on preparing and carrying out the annotation of this year’s test data. Finally, we would like to thank all the participants for their contributions and discussions at the workshop.
NLP4CMC III : 3rd workshop on natural language processing for computer-mediated communication
(2016)
The present paper reports the first results of the compilation and annotation of a blog corpus for German. The main aim of the project is the representation of the blog discourse structure and relations between its elements (blog posts, comments) and participants (bloggers, commentators). The data included in the corpus were manually collected from the scientific blog portal SciLogs. The feature catalogue for the corpus annotation includes three types of information which is directly or indirectly provided in the blog or can be construed by means of statistical analysis or computational tools. At this point, only directly available information (e.g., title of the blog post, name of the blogger etc.) has been annotated. We believe, our blog corpus can be of interest for the general study of blog structure or related research questions as well as for the development of NLP methods and techniques (e.g. for authorship detection).
The article discusses the methodology adopted for a cross-linguistic synchronic and diachronic corpus study on indefinites. The study covered five indefinite expressions, each in a different language. The main goal of the study was to verify the distribution of these indefinites synchronically and to attest their historical development. The methodology we used is a form of functional labeling which combines both context (syntax) and meaning (semantics) using as a starting point Haspelmath’s (1997) functional map. In the article we identify Haspelmath’s functions with logico-semantic interpretations and propose a binary branching decision tree assigning each instance of an indefinite exactly one function in the map.
The early acquisition of Greek compounds by two monolingual Greek girls aged between 1;8 and 3;0 years is studied in a usage-based theoretical framework. Special importance is attached to the morphological structure of Greek compound types occurring in child speech and child-directed speech. Greek nominal compound formation does not consist in the mere juxtaposition of words or roots, but involves stems as well as a compound marker. Major questions addressed are the transparency of compounds and productive nominal compound formation. Evidence for productivity of nominal compound formation has been found with only one of the two girls. In contrast to other languages, neoclassical nominal compounds by far exceed endocentric subordinative ones tokenwise in Greek child speech and child-directed speech providing evidence of entrenchment rather than productivity.
In a cross-linguistic comparison it is shown that, in spite of the fact that both Standard Modern Greek and German are rich in nominal compounds, their number is much more limited in Greek than in German child speech. An explanation for this apparent paradox is provided by an onomasiological approach to lexical typology based on a sample list of nominal compounds occurring in German child language and their Greek translational equivalents. It has been found that while use of nominal compounds is common in colloquial German including child-centered situations, it is more typical of Greek formal than colloquial registers.
Children’s interpretations of sentences containing focus particles do not seem adult-like until school age. This study investigates how German 4-year-old children comprehend sentences with the focus particle ‘nur’ (only) by using different tasks and controlling for the impact of general cognitive abilities on performance measures. Two sentence types with ‘only’ in either pre-subject or pre-object position were presented. Eye gaze data and verbal responses were collected via the visual world paradigm combined with a sentence-picture verification task. While the eye tracking data revealed an adult-like pattern of focus particle processing, the sentence-picture verification replicated previous findings of poor comprehension, especially for ‘only’ in pre-subject position. A second study focused on the impact of general cognitive abilities on the outcomes of the verification task. Working memory was related to children’s performance in both sentence types whereas inhibitory control was selectively related to the number of errors for sentences with ‘only’ in pre-subject position. These results suggest that children at the age of 4 years have the linguistic competence to correctly interpret sentences with focus particles, which–depending on specific task demands–may be masked by immature general cognitive abilities.
Donose se neke nove spoznaje o Lajpciškom lekcionaru, ćiriličnom rukopisu najvjerojatnije iz šestog ili sedmog desetljeća XVI. stoljeća. Ponajprije je riječ o rezultatima analize vodenih znakova, što je osobito važno jer je datacija rukopisa u literaturi bila prijeporna, a zatim i o novim podacima o knjižnici i signaturi rukopisa. Također se, u bliskoj vezi s analizom folijacije rukopisa, izlaže jedna važna tekstološka spoznaja koja pouzdano pokazuje da je predložak bio cjelovit, što indirektno osnažuje tezu da rukopisu na početku nedostaje devet listova, a ne, kako je tvrdio Joseph Schütz, samo jedan.
Das Tip-of-the-Tongue-Phänomen (TOT) bildet neben Pausen und Versprechern eine weitere Störungsklasse der Sprachproduktion. Im TOT-Zustand kann auf semantische (Konzept) und syntaktische Informationen (Lemma) zugegriffen werden, aber nur begrenzt auf phonologische Informationen (Lexem). Die komplette Wortform bleibt verborgen. Um TOTs im Labor zu evozieren, wurden Definitionen auf einem Computerbildschirm präsentiert, z. B. „ständig umlaufender Aufzug ohne Tür“ für Paternoster. Die Probanden gaben über die Computertastatur an, ob sie das Wort kennen und benennen können (JA), das gesuchte Wort nicht kennen (NEIN) oder es ihnen auf der Zunge liegt (TOT). Im TOT-Zustand wurde ein Cue visuell präsentiert. Beim Cueing-Verfahren wurden bisher Silben-Cues in Wörter bzw. Pseudowörter eingebettet und diese innerhalb von Wortlisten dargeboten, um die Auflösung eines TOTs zu manipulieren. In den vorliegenden Studien wurden die Silben-Cues isoliert präsentiert. Der Vorteil besteht darin, dass eine Silbe per se keine semantischen (Wortbedeutung) und syntaktischen Informationen (Wortart) enthält. Die Präsentation isolierter korrekter, inkorrekter und erweiterter Silben ist neu in der TOT-Forschung. Außerdem bietet die vorliegende Arbeit die erste Studie sowohl im Cueing-Paradigma als auch im Bereich der Reaktionszeitmessung (RT) zu TOTs im Deutschen.
Im Pre-Test wurden die Definitionen vorgetestet. In den beiden Pilotstudien wurden das Design für die Reaktionszeitmessung evaluiert und weitere Definitionen gesammelt und überprüft. Im ersten Experiment zeigte sich, dass mit der korrekten Silbe (z. B. Pa für Paternoster) die TOTs etwa doppelt so schnell aufgelöst werden konnten als mit einer inkorrekten Silbe (z. B. Ko) und der Kontrollbedingung (xxx). Die korrekte Silbe führte außerdem zu signifikant mehr akkuraten Antworten im Vergleich zu den beiden anderen Bedingungen. Die inkorrekte Silbe hat die TOT-Auflösung zwar nicht blockiert (nicht mehr inakkurate Antworten), aber gehemmt: Die Anzahl an akkuraten Antworten wurde reduziert und die Anzahl an unaufgelösten TOTs erhöht. Im zweiten Experiment wurde demonstriert, dass die erweiterte Silbe (z. B. Pat für Paternoster) die TOT-Auflösung im Vergleich zur regulären Silbe sowohl signifikant beschleunigte (kürzere RTs) als auch signifikant verstärkte (mehr akkurate Antworten). Dies lässt sich mit dem segmentalen Überlappungseffekt erklären. Die Ergebnisse der vorliegenden Studien unterstützen Sprachproduktionsmodelle, die einen interaktiven Aktivierungsfluss haben und eine Silben-Ebene unterhalb der Phonem-Ebene annehmen.
Rezension zu Leksikon marketinga. Jozo Previšić (Hrsg.). Zagreb: Ekonomski fakultet, 2010.
Rezension zu Željka Fink Arsovski; Barbara Kovačević; Anita Hrnjak: Bibliografija hrvatske frazeologije i CD s popisom frazema analiziranih u znanstvenim i stručnim radovima. Zagreb: KNJIGRA, 2010.
Rezension zu Silvana Vranić: Govori sjeverozapadnoga makrosustava na otoku Pagu, 2. MORFOLOGIJA. Rijeka: Matica hrvatska Ogranak Novalja, Filozofski fakultet Sveučilišta u Rijeci, 2011, 235 S.
Rezension zu Dunja Jutronić: Spliski govor. Split: Naklada Bošković, 2010, 476 S.
Rezension zu A. Celinić; I. Kurtović Budja; A. Čilaš Šimpraga; Ž. Jozić: Prinosi hrvatskoj dijalektnoj fonologiji. Split – Zagreb: Književni krug Split – Institut za hrvatski jezik i jezikoslovlje, 2010.
Rezension zu Marin Vodanović; Drago Štambuk; Ana Ostroški Anić: Stomatološko nazivlje. Zagreb: Stomatološki fakultet Sveučilišta u Zagrebu, 2010, 104 S.
Rezension zu Marta Medved Krajnović: Od jednojezičnosti do višejezičnosti. Uvod u istraživanja procesa ovladavanja inim jezikom. Zagreb: Leykam international, 2010, 193 S.
Jede der linguistischen Teildisziplinen bemüht sich, im Rahmen ihrer Forschung zu bestmöglichen Ergebnissen zu kommen. Dies zeigt sich sowohl im theoretischen Bereich, in dem bis dahin ungelöste Fragen beantwortet werden, als auch in der Praxis, die auf der Theorie beruht. Das Ziel bestmöglicher Ergebnisse verfolgen auch die sprachwissenschaftlichen Disziplinen Lexikographie und Wörterbuchforschung, deren Weiterentwicklung von der breiten Öffentlichkeit besonders positiv bewertet wird.
Die vorliegende Studie von Christine Konecny ist ein umfassendes Sammelwerk, das die internationalen Tendenzen in der Betrachtung von Kollokationen ausführlich erfasst. Der Titel und der Untertitel weisen eindeutig auf die theoretische und analytische Ausrichtung der Arbeit hin. Im ersten Teil werden die Kollokationen linguistisch betrachtet, es werden Auffassungs-, Definitions- und Abgrenzungsprobleme von Kollokationen detailliert geschildert. Eine Schlüsselkomponente im Titel ist jedoch nicht nur das Wort Kollokationen, das das Thema der Studie benennt. Aussagekräftiger ist der Untertitel, konkret sind es die Wörter Versuch und Annäherung. Die Studie ist der Versuch, einerseits die Position der Kollokationen sowohl in der Systemlinguistik als auch auf der Supraebene zu beschreiben, andererseits die Kollokationen nach unterschiedlichen sprachwissenschaftlichen Gesichtspunkten – vor allem unter phraseologischen, korpuslinguistischen, systemlinguistischen, pragmalinguistischen Aspekten - sowie aus der Sicht der kognitiven Psycholinguistik, Fremdsprachendidaktik, Wortbildungslehre, Lexikographie, kontrastiven und konfrontativen Linguistik und Translatologie zu bestimmen. Ein weiterer Versuch betrifft die Abgrenzung und Klassifikation der Kollokationen. Die Autorin hat sich u. a. zum Ziel gesetzt, Kollokationen von festen, teil- und nicht idiomatischen Wortverbindungen zu unterscheiden und sie anhand unterschiedlicher Klassifizierungskriterien hauptsächlich nach syntaktisch-morphologischen und semantisch-begrifflichen Unterscheidungsmerkmalen zu kategorisieren.
Decomposing coordination
(2014)
Natural languages display a surprising diversity of expression of elementary logical operations. The study of this variation is emerging as an important topic of cross-linguistic semantics. In this paper, we address the expression of coordination from this perspective, especially coordination of individual denoting expressions such as "John and Mary". We argue that there is an underlying universal structure for individual coordination, and that the cross-linguistic variation can be explained by assuming that languages pronounce different morphemes of this universal structure. In particular, we argue that there two main types of system for the expression of individual coordination: the J-type and the μ-type. In μ-type languages the morpheme used for individual coordination also has uses a quantificational or focus particle, while in the J-type languages it doesn't. Instead at least in many J-type languages the same morpheme is used for individual and propositional coordination. The evidence we present for our model comes from two sources: new data from specific data of the J-type and μ-type languages, and from a study of the historical development of the expression of individual coordination in Indo-European which switched from a μ-type to a J-type system.
The claim of this paper is that embedded definites can, despite the appearances, be accounted for on the uniqueness approach. Far from being a surprise, we argue that the behavior of embedded definites is actually expected once two independent facts are taken into account: the ability of noun phrases to take scope, i.e., to be interpreted in a different place from their syntactic position, and the interaction of presuppositions and scope-taking elements. Specifically, we analyze embedded definites as a case of inverse linking (Gabbay and Moravscik, 1974; May, 1977): the embedded definite takes scope over the embedding one. The presupposition of the embedded definite is weakened as a result of the independently motivated process of intermediate accommodation (Kratzer, 1989; Berman, 1991). In our case, this process transfers the presupposition of the embedding definite into the restrictor of the embedded one.
Like other scope-taking processes, inverse linking is generally taken to be subject to locality constraints: if a syntactic island, such as a finite clause boundary, intervenes in the path of a scope-taking element, then the resulting reading is unavailable or degraded (Rodman, 1976). Since our account views embedded definites as cases of inverse linking, we predict that inserting an island into an embedded definite, all else being equal, should lead to a similar degradation. We report results from an online survey with 800 participants that confirm this prediction.
The late physicist Carl Sagan, whom I quote in the first part of my title, skillfully phrased the common sense view on evidence in the mature sciences. In linguistics, however, evidence has become a controversial issue, especially so when it comes to the investigation of less well studied languages. In this paper, I argue that Sagan's principle should be applied to linguistics. The growing accessibility of a wide array of experimental techniques and computational tools to analyze such data makes it feasible to back up extraordinary claims with evidence from a variety of sources. At the same time, it is in many cases possible to agree on what constitutes an ordinary claim and focus the extra effort on extraordinary claims. For non-controversial claims no more than the minimum effort to establish the claim and properly document the evidence is necessary.
Irene Heim in unpublished work proposed a new syntax-semantics interface for propositional attitude reports based on an ontology without transworld individuals, but counterpart functions instead. We show that the approach can capture the 'de re'/'de dicto' distinction, but makes different predictions from accounts with transworld individuals. Specifically, the account uses a non-invertible counterpart functions: a single individual in an alternative world can be the counterpart of many individuals of the real world. The directionality of counterpart functions predicts that a 'de dicto' interpreted DP cannot be an argument of a 'de re' interpreted predicate. We show that the predicted restriction is corroborated by existing work on restrictions on 'de re' interpretation. The derivation of constraints on 'de re' interpretation argues empirically for the counterpart ontology and Heim’s implementation thereof.
In at least three environments—de se binding, distributive binding, and focus quantification—some presuppositions exhibit unexpectedly weak projection behavior. This holds for the presuppositions of bound pronouns, but also several other cases of presupposition. In this paper, I first describe a general approach to capture the interaction of presuppositions with quantificational operators within a multi-tiered evaluation procedure. Secondly I discuss data from Condition A, in particular non-bound occurrences of reflexives, that motivate a presuppositional account of Condition A and confirm the general approach.
The Strongest Meaning Hypothesis (SMH henceforth), a pragmatic principle motivated in Dalrymple et al.'s (1998) study of reciprocals, has recently been applied to problems in implicatures (Chierchia et al. to appear) and Vagueness (Cobreros et al. 2011). In this snippet, I argue that the SMH can apply to embedded sentences, which is perhaps unusual for a pragmatic principle.
In this paper, I revisit the arguments against the use of fuzzy logic in linguistics (or more generally, against a truth-functional account of vagueness). In part, this is an exercise to explain to fuzzy logicians why linguists have shown little interest in their research paradigm. But, the paper contains more than this interdisciplinary service effort that I started out on: In fact, this seems an opportune time for revisiting the arguments against fuzzy logic in linguistics since three recent developments affect the argument. First, the formal apparatus of fuzzy logic has been made more general since the 1970s, specifically by Hajek [6], and this may make it possible to define operators in a way to make fuzzy logic more suitable for linguistic purposes. Secondly, recent research in philosophy has examined variations of fuzzy logic ([18, 19]). Since the goals of linguistic semantics seem sometimes closer to those of some branches of philosophy of language than they are to the goals of mathematical logic, fuzzy logic work in philosophy may mark the right time to reexamine fuzzy logic from a linguistic perspective as well. Finally, the reasoning used to exclude fuzzy logic in linguistics has been tied to the intuition that p and not p is a contradiction. However, this intuition seems dubious especially when p contains a vague predicate. For instance, one can easily think of circumstances where 'What I did was smart and not smart.' or 'Bea is both tall and not tall.' don’t sound like senseless contradictions. In fact, some recent experimental work that I describe below has shown that contradictions of classical logic aren’t always felt to be contradictory by speakers. So, it is important to see to what extent the argument against fuzzy logic depends on a specific stance on the semantics of contradictions. In sum then, there are three good reasons to take another look at fuzzy logic for linguistic purposes.
This paper corroborates the interpretability proposal of Chomsky (1995) with evidence from scrambling in Japanese and German. First it is shown that scrambling in Japanese is semantically vacuous, whereas scrambling in German is semantically contentful. Chomsky’s proposal then predicts that the feature driving Japanese scrambling is erased after checking, while the corresponding feature in German remains visible, specifically for the Shortest Attract condition. Looking at patterns of movement that result in overlapping paths, this prediction is seen to be correct.
Embedded implicatures and experimental constraints : a reply to Geurts & Pouscoulous and Chemla
(2010)
Experimental evidence on embedded implicatures by Chemla (2009b) and Geurts & Pouscoulous (2009a) has fewer theoretical consequences than assumed: On the one hand, the evidence successfully argues against obligatory local implicature computation, which has however already been discredited. On the other hand, the data are fully consistent with optional local implicature computation.
The paper presents an additional argument for a specific account of semantic binding: the flat-binding analysis. The argument is based on observations concerning sloppy interpretations in verb phrase ellipsis when the binder is not the subject of the elided VP. In one such case, it is important that one of the binders belong to the domain of the other. This case can be derived from the flat-binding analysis as is shown in the paper, while it is unclear how to account for it within other analyses of semantic binding.
This article develops a Gricean account for the computation of scalar implicatures in cases where one scalar term is in the scope of another. It shows that a cross-product of two quantitative scales yields the appropriate scale for many such cases. One exception is cases involving disjunction. For these, I propose an analysis that makes use of a novel, partially ordered quantitative scale for disjunction and capitalizes on the idea that implicatures may have different epistemic status.
The interpretation of traces
(2004)
This paper argues that parts of the lexical content of an A-bar moved phrase must be interpreted in the base position of movement. The argument is based on a study of deletion of a phrase that contains the base position of movement. I show that deletion licensing is sensitive to the content of the moved phrase. In this way, I corroborate and extend conclusions based on Condition C reconstruction by N. Chomsky and D. Fox. My result provides semantic evidence for the existence of traces and gives semantic content to the A/A-bar distinction.
A contrast to a trace
(2001)
For movement, such as quantifier raising, the three different structures illustrated in (1) are discussed in the recent literature.
(1) A girl danced with every boy
a. [every boy]x a girl danced with x (copy + replace)
b. [every boy]x a girl danced with [every boy] (copy)
c. [every boy]x a girl danced with [thex boy] (copy + modify)
In this paper, I'll call the proposal illustrated by (1a) the copy+replace theory since the movement is analyzed as first copying the moving phrase followed by replacing the moving phrase with a trace in the base position of movement. Chomsky (1993) and Fox (1999) argue against the copy+replace theory (1a) on the basis of Condition C data that show that moved material can behave as if it occupied the base position of movement. This behavior would, for example, be expected on the copy theory of movement illustrated by (1b), which also seems conceptually simpler than the copy+replace theory since it involves only copying without replacement. This conceptual advantage, however, is probably only apparent since a theory of the interpretation of structures like (1b) would probably be more complicated than for (1a). Standard assumptions about interpretation, at least, don't predict the right meaning when applied to (1b). For this reason, Chomsky and Fox propose what I'll call the copy+modify-theory illustrated in (1c). This proposes that copying is followed by a trace modification operation that replaces the determiner of the moved DP with something else. I assume that this is an indexed definite determiner, the interpretation of which is to be clarified below.
Why variables?
(1999)
This paper addresses the question of how sentence-internal semantic dependencies are computed? The kind of semantic dependency I am looking at is that between a so called "bound (variable) pronoun" and its binder illustrated in (1), where the dependency is indicated by a connecting line. With all the literature on the topic (see for example Partee 1973, Percus 1998), I assume that this case is the prototype of all semantic dependencies, and therefore any result for this case generalizes to all types of sentence-internal semantic dependencies.
This paper addresses the syntax and semantics plurals, and then applies it to reciprocal expressions. In the course of this investigation, I address two problems for the conventional view that a reciprocal makes essentially the same semantic contribution to the sentence as other noun phrases, but has an interesting internal structure. I will show that both problems are properties of plurality in general, and can be successfully explained along these lines. As a result, the paper is more about plurality in general than reciprocals though the goal of the paper is to account for the two problems relating to reciprocals.
Early features
(1995)