Chapter 11. The meaning of question words in statements in child Mandarin
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Stephen Crain
Abstract
This paper reports the findings of three experiments investigating children’s emerging knowledge of the semantics of information-seeking questions and declarative statements in Mandarin Chinese. Mandarin is particularly revealing about the semantic relationship between questions and statements, because it is a wh-in-situ language where question words appear in the same surface syntactic position in both questions and statements. The non-interrogative meanings that Mandarin-speaking children assign to question words lend weight to a unified approach to the semantics of existential expressions, including Free Choice Expressions, Negative Polarity Items, and disjunction words. When Mandarin question words appear in statements, children interpret them to be the semantic equivalents of existential expressions. The findings, therefore, support the unified approach to the semantics of existential expressions.
Abstract
This paper reports the findings of three experiments investigating children’s emerging knowledge of the semantics of information-seeking questions and declarative statements in Mandarin Chinese. Mandarin is particularly revealing about the semantic relationship between questions and statements, because it is a wh-in-situ language where question words appear in the same surface syntactic position in both questions and statements. The non-interrogative meanings that Mandarin-speaking children assign to question words lend weight to a unified approach to the semantics of existential expressions, including Free Choice Expressions, Negative Polarity Items, and disjunction words. When Mandarin question words appear in statements, children interpret them to be the semantic equivalents of existential expressions. The findings, therefore, support the unified approach to the semantics of existential expressions.
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Chapter 1. The historical emergence and current study of semantics in acquisition 1
-
Section I. Lexical meaning
- Chapter 2. Word meanings and semantic domains in acquisition 21
- Chapter 3. The influence of linguistic temporal organization on children’s understanding of temporal terms and concepts 45
- Chapter 4. Semantic features of early verb vocabularies 67
-
Section II. Event semantics
- Chapter 5. On the acquisition of event culmination 95
- Chapter 6. Telicity in typical and impaired acquisition 123
-
Section III. Syntactic structure and semantic meaning
- Chapter 7. Not all subjects are agents 153
- Chapter 8. Analogical structure mapping and the formation of abstract constructions 177
- Chapter 9. The labeling problem in syntactic bootstrapping 197
- Chapter 10. Perspectives on truth 221
-
Section IV. Logical interpretations
- Chapter 11. The meaning of question words in statements in child Mandarin 249
- Chapter 12. Overt, covert, and clandestine operations 275
-
Section V. The relation between semantics and pragmatics
- Chapter 13. Developmental insights into gappy phenomena 301
- Chapter 14. Four-year-old children compute scalar implicatures in absence of epistemic reasoning 325
- Chapter 15. The acquisition path of near-reflexivity 351
- List of Topics 379
- List of Languages 387
- List of Authors 389
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Prelim pages i
- Table of contents v
- Chapter 1. The historical emergence and current study of semantics in acquisition 1
-
Section I. Lexical meaning
- Chapter 2. Word meanings and semantic domains in acquisition 21
- Chapter 3. The influence of linguistic temporal organization on children’s understanding of temporal terms and concepts 45
- Chapter 4. Semantic features of early verb vocabularies 67
-
Section II. Event semantics
- Chapter 5. On the acquisition of event culmination 95
- Chapter 6. Telicity in typical and impaired acquisition 123
-
Section III. Syntactic structure and semantic meaning
- Chapter 7. Not all subjects are agents 153
- Chapter 8. Analogical structure mapping and the formation of abstract constructions 177
- Chapter 9. The labeling problem in syntactic bootstrapping 197
- Chapter 10. Perspectives on truth 221
-
Section IV. Logical interpretations
- Chapter 11. The meaning of question words in statements in child Mandarin 249
- Chapter 12. Overt, covert, and clandestine operations 275
-
Section V. The relation between semantics and pragmatics
- Chapter 13. Developmental insights into gappy phenomena 301
- Chapter 14. Four-year-old children compute scalar implicatures in absence of epistemic reasoning 325
- Chapter 15. The acquisition path of near-reflexivity 351
- List of Topics 379
- List of Languages 387
- List of Authors 389