Kapitel
Open Access
Chapter 13 Scope ambiguity and the loss of NPI feature: Evidence from the history of Japanese scalar particle dani
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Tomohide Kinuhata
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter I
- Series preface V
- Preface VII
- Contents IX
- Contributors XIII
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Introduction
- Chapter 1 Empirical and theoretical issues of polarity-sensitive expressions 1
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Part I: Syntax of negative polarity items
- Chapter 2 Negative polarity and clause structure in Japanese 39
- Chapter 3 Negation-sensitive elements outside the Neg-domain 83
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Part II: Syntax/semantics of polarity-sensitive expressions
- Chapter 4 Degree quantification, minimum quantity predicates, and polarity in Japanese 117
- Chapter 5 Polarity sensitivity of existential sentences with numerals in Japanese 145
- Chapter 6 Polarity sensitivity and equative markers in Japanese and German 165
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Part III: Positive polarity items
- Chapter 7 On the rescuing of positive polarity items in Japanese and English: A hybrid approach 185
- Chapter 8 Cross-linguistic variation in the scope of disjunction: Positive polarity, or anti-reconstruction? 225
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Part IV: Discourse/pragmatic properties of polarity-sensitive items
- Chapter 9 The forms and meanings of negative polar interrogatives in English and Japanese: Epistemic bias, information structure, prosody, and further issues 261
- Chapter 10 The polarity sensitivity of reactive intensifiers in Japanese and English 297
- Chapter 11 On propositional anaphora: ‘Referential’ propositions and propositional proforms 343
- Chapter 12 Two types of attenuation strategies for polarity-sensitive items: The semantics of degree adverbs amari and sonnani in Japanese 377
-
Part V: Historical study of polarity-sensitive items
- Chapter 13 Scope ambiguity and the loss of NPI feature: Evidence from the history of Japanese scalar particle dani 415
- Index 453
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter I
- Series preface V
- Preface VII
- Contents IX
- Contributors XIII
-
Introduction
- Chapter 1 Empirical and theoretical issues of polarity-sensitive expressions 1
-
Part I: Syntax of negative polarity items
- Chapter 2 Negative polarity and clause structure in Japanese 39
- Chapter 3 Negation-sensitive elements outside the Neg-domain 83
-
Part II: Syntax/semantics of polarity-sensitive expressions
- Chapter 4 Degree quantification, minimum quantity predicates, and polarity in Japanese 117
- Chapter 5 Polarity sensitivity of existential sentences with numerals in Japanese 145
- Chapter 6 Polarity sensitivity and equative markers in Japanese and German 165
-
Part III: Positive polarity items
- Chapter 7 On the rescuing of positive polarity items in Japanese and English: A hybrid approach 185
- Chapter 8 Cross-linguistic variation in the scope of disjunction: Positive polarity, or anti-reconstruction? 225
-
Part IV: Discourse/pragmatic properties of polarity-sensitive items
- Chapter 9 The forms and meanings of negative polar interrogatives in English and Japanese: Epistemic bias, information structure, prosody, and further issues 261
- Chapter 10 The polarity sensitivity of reactive intensifiers in Japanese and English 297
- Chapter 11 On propositional anaphora: ‘Referential’ propositions and propositional proforms 343
- Chapter 12 Two types of attenuation strategies for polarity-sensitive items: The semantics of degree adverbs amari and sonnani in Japanese 377
-
Part V: Historical study of polarity-sensitive items
- Chapter 13 Scope ambiguity and the loss of NPI feature: Evidence from the history of Japanese scalar particle dani 415
- Index 453