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Non-monotonic Negativity

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Title: Non-monotonic Negativity


1
Non-monotonic Negativity
PACLIC 17 10/03/2003 Singapore
  • Sumiyo Nishiguchi
  • Osaka University
  • UCLA

2
New Description of NPI Licensers
  • Non-Upward Entailingness
  • Downward entailing Non-monotonic
  • contra Ladusaw 1979,1980
  • expansion from Progovac 1992,1994
  • Non-monotonic licensers
  • Exclusivity condition
  • license weak NPIs (any, ever)

3
Anti UEness
Ladusaws DE theory


Non-monotonic
UE
DE
Non-UE
License weak NPIs
4
Negative Polarity Items (NPIs)
  • any, anything, anymore, ever, at all, whatsoever,
    budge an inch, care to VP, bother V-ing.
  • (1)a. I didnt realize that he admired her at
    all.
  • b. He admired her at all.
  • (Klima 1964282)
  • (2)a. None of the rivals said anything
    whatsoever.
  • b. Some of the rivals said anything whatsoever.
    (Hoeksema 1986a35)

5
Varieties of NPI licensers
  • (3) At most
  • a. At most three women have ever loved him.
  • b. ?At least three women have ever loved him.
  • (4) Every
  • a. Every student who had ever read anything
    about phrenology attended the lecture.
  • b. Some student who had ever read anything
    about phrenology attended the lecture.
  • (Ladusaw 19803)
  • (5) Only
  • a. Only Bill had ever read anything about
    phrenology. b. Even Bill had ever read anything
    about phrenology.

6
Attempts to capture the common feature of NPI
licensers
  • Ladusaw (1979,1980)
  • Linebarger (1980)
  • Zwarts (1993)
  • van der Wouden (1997)
  • Giannakidou (1998)
  • Progovac (1988,1992,1994)
  • von Fintel (1999)
  • Yoshimura (1992)
  • Counterexamples

7
Ladusaws DE Theory (Ladusaw 1979, 1980)
  • A negative-polarity item is acceptable only if
    it is interpreted in the scope of a
    downward-entailing expression. (Ladusaw
    198013)
  • Every ?MON ?TRIGGER
  • (7) a. Every student who had ever read anything
    on phrenology attended the lecture.
  • b. Every student who attended the lecture
    had ever read anything about phrenology.
  • c. Every man walks. ? Every father
    walks.
  • d. Every man walks. -/? Every man walks
    slowly. (ibid.6)

man
father
8
Problems with DE theory Linebarger 1980
Hoeksema 1986 Nishiguchi 2002
  • Only ?? MON ?? ? TRIGGER ?
  • (8)a. Only people who know a language will be
    admitted to the lecture. ???
  • Only people who know a Romance language
    will be admitted to the lecture.
  • b. Only people who have ever been to Paris
    will be admitted to the lecture.
  • Superlatives ?? MON ?? ?TRIGGER ?
  • (9)a. John is the greatest man who ever lived.
    ?/?
  • b. John is the greatest man who ever lived in
    Japan.
  • Ordinal numerals ?? MON ? TRIGGER (Nishiguchi
    2002)
  • (10)a. John is the second European who has ever
    seen that sacred statue. ?/?
  • b. John is the second European who has ever seen
    that sacred female statue.

9
Problems with Linebarger (1980, 1987)
  • Two-fold condition
  • Immediate scope contraint
  • Negative implicatum (NI)
  • Counterexamples glad, happy lack NI, but trigger
    NPIs.
  • (14) A But these tickets are terrible!
  • B Be glad we got ANY tickets!
  • (Kadmon and Landman 1993384)
  • (15) I am happy you passed the entrance exam.
  • --/-- gt
  • I had expected that you would not pass the
    entrance exam.

10
Nonveridicality Zwarts (1995) Giannakidou
(1998,1999,2001)
  • Licensing condition for affective polarity items
  • ?. An affective polarity item a will be
    licensed in a sentence S iff S provides some
    expressions g which is nonveridical, and a is
    in the scope of g.
  • ?. In certain cases, a may be licensed
    indirectly in S iff S gives rise to a negative
    implicature f, and a is in the scope of negation
    in f.
    (Giannakidou 1998149)

11
Counterexamples to nonveridicality
  • Glad, happy
  • neither nonveridical nor accommodating negative
    implicature.
  • (22) I was glad that John had llamas in his
    apartment. ?
  • John had llamas in his apartment.
  • (veridical)
  • (23) I was glad that John had llamas in his
    apartment. --/--gt
  • I had expected that John would not have llamas in
    his apartment.

12
A Hierarchy of Negative Expressions (Zwarts
1993 van der Wouden 1997)
  • monotone decreasing few, seldom, hardly
  • f(X)?f(Y)? f(X?Y)
  • f(X?Y)? f(X)?f(Y)
  • anti-additive nobody, never, nothing
  • f(X)?f(Y)? f(X?Y)
  • f(X?Y)? f(X)?f(Y)
  • f(X)?f(Y) ? f(X?Y)
  • antimorphic not, not the teacher, not Judas
  • f(X?Y) ? f(X)?f(Y)
  • f(X)?f(Y) ? f(X?Y)
  • f(X?Y)? f(X)?f(Y)
  • f(X)?f(Y) ? f(X?Y)

Non-monotonic
superstrong
weak
strong
13
  • Strawson DE
  • (von Fintel 1999)
  • A Binding Approach
  • (Progovac 1988, 1992, 1994)
  • Cognitive Structure of Negation
  • (Yoshimura 1992, 1996)

14
Anti-UE
  • Non-UE contexts can license NPIs.
  • Expansion on Progovac (1992) on questions
  • (42) A function f of type lts, tgt is the NPI
    licenser iff for all x, y of type s such that
    x ? y, f(x)-/? f(y)

15
Anti UEness

Ladusaws DE theory

Non-monotonic
UE
DE
Non-UE
16
Non-monotonic determiners Ordinal numerals
  • Ordinal numerals ?? MON ?TRIGGER
  • (Nishiguchi 2002)
  • a. John is the second European who has ever
    seen that sacred statue. ?/?
  • John is the second European who has ever
    seen that sacred female statue. b. Fred was the
    first to ever swim across the Adriatic.
    (Hoeksema 2000116)
  • C. It was the first time she had ever seen
    fear in Connor O'Dell's eyes.
  • (British National Corpus FPM 369 )

17
determiner the generic NP
  • (49) The ?? MON, ?TRIGGER
  • a. The man who has ever learned any language was
    admitted to the lectures. ?/?
  • The man who has ever learned a Romance
    language was admitted to the lectures.
  • (50) Generic NP ?? MON, ?TRIGGER
  • a. Dogs have four legs. -/?
  • Dogs that have been in accidents involving
    chain saws have four legs.
  • (Heim 1984103)
  • b. Students who have ever read anything about
    phrenology attended the lecture.

18
exactly n, the n - Non-monotonic determiners
  • (43) Exactly n ??MON ?? ?TRIGGER ? (Ladusaw
    1980)
  • a. Exactly five people who had ever learned
    anything about phrenology attended the
    lectures.
  • c. Exactly ten people played sports. ?/?
  • Exactly ten women played sports.
  • (44) The n ??MON ?TRIGGER
  • a. The five men walk. ?/?
  • The five young men walk.
  • b. The four people who dared to have a bite were
    poisoned.

19
(precisely) n, nearly all -Non-monotonic
determiners
  • (45) (Precisely) n ??MON?? ? TRIGGER ?
  • a. Seven men walk. ?/?Seven young men walk.
  • b. Seven men walk. ?/? Seven men walk slowly.
  • c. Five people who dared to have a bite were
    poisoned.
  • (46) Nearly all ??MON ? TRIGGER
  • a. Nearly all men walk. ?/? Nearly all young men
    walk.
  • b. Nearly all men who have ever learned anything
    about phrenology were admitted to the
    lectures.
  • c. Nearly all people who dared to have a bite
    were poisoned.

20
few -Non-monotonic determiner
  • (47) Few2 ?? MON ?TRIGGER
  • a. Few men walk down the street. ?/?
  • Few young men walk down the street.
  • b. Few men who have ever learned anything
    about phrenology were admitted to the
    lectures.
  • c. Few men who dared to have a bite were
    poisoned.

21
Non-monotonic expressions
  • If-clause
  • If and only if-clause
  • be happy
  • be glad

22
IfIf and only if
  • (51) If-clause (Linebarger 1980)
  • a. If you ever come to Japan you will have
    fun. -/?
  • b. If you ever come to Japan and become sick,
    you will have fun.
  • (52) If and only if clause
  • a. The ER series will end if and only if John
    Carter is ever assassinated. ?/?
  • b. The ER series will end if and only if any of
    the staff is ever assassinated.

23
glad, happy
  • (53) Glad
  • a. John is glad he will teach, but John is not
    glad he will teach on Tuesdays. He prefers
    Wednesdays.
  • b. Im glad ANYBODY likes me!
  • (Kadmon and Landman
    1993384)
  • (54) Happy (Lee 1999)
  • a. I am happy that there is any food left.
  • b. I am happy he bought a car. ?/?
  • I am happy he bought a Honda.

24
hope
  • (55)a. These razor blades are going like
    hotcakes. I hope theres any left.
  • (Horn 2001184)
  • b. Nicholas hopes to get a free trip on the
    Concorde. So Nicholas hopes to get a trip on
    the Concorde.
  • (Asher
    1987171)

25
Non-monotonic licensers
  • NM determiners
  • ??MON ?? ?TRIGGER?
  • only, exactly n, (precisely) n, superlatives
  • ?? MON ?TRIGGER
  • the, the n, ordinal numerals, Generic NPs,
    nearly
  • all, few2
  • NM non-determiners
  • if, if and only if, happy, glad, hope

26
Exclusivity Common feature of NM determiners
  • (57) a is a non-monotonic licenser of type
    ltet, ltet,tgtgt
  • iff
  • a lf ?Dlte,tgt . lg ? Dlte,tgt . for all
    x?De such that g(x)1, f(x)1
  • (58) the lf ? Dlte,tgt . lg ? Dlte,tgt .
    for all x? De such that g(x)1,
  • f(x) 1

27
the n
  • (58) the three lf ? Dlte,tgt .
  • lg ? Dlte,tgt . there are some x1, x2, and
    x3, such that f(x1) 1, f(x2)1, f(x3)1,
    g(x1) 1, g(x2)1, and g(x3)1, and for all y
    such that f(y) 1, y?x1, y?x2, and y?x3, g(y)
    0
  • (59) The three men walk. ?/?
  • The three men walk slowly.

28
No other than x is g(y) common assertion
  • (63) Only Muriel voted for Hubert. ----gt
  • No one other than Muriel voted for Hubert.
  • (Horn 196998-99)
  • (65) Exactly five children were injured. ----gt
  • No other children than the exactly five were
    injured.
  • (66) Joan is the most beautiful woman I have ever
    met. ----gt
  • No one other than Joan is the most beautiful
    woman.
  • (67) Franklin was the second man who came in.
    ----gt
  • No one other than Franklin was the second man
    who came in.
  • (68) Few students came in. ----gt
  • No one other than few students came in.

29
Exclusivity non-determiners
  • (68) I will go if and only if it does not
    rain.
  • ----gt
  • I will not go if it rains.
  • (69) I hope to get a new car.
  • ----gt
  • I do not hope to get anything else, like an old
    car.

30
Generalization
  • (70) Non-monotonic contexts which meet
    exclusivity condition can license weak NPIs.

31
Strengthening effect Motivation behind NPI
licensing in NM contexts
  • (72) a. Taro is the only Japanese who has ever
    been to Shostka.
  • b. Taro is the only Japanese who has been to
    Shostka.
  • (73) a. Men with any sense avoid installment
    plans.
  • b. Men with sense avoid installment plans.
  • Wideners any and ever create stronger
    statements, excluding any possibilities (Kadmon
    and Landman 1993).

32
SUMMARY
  • New description of NPI licensers
  • Non UE
  • Exclusivity
  • Non-monotonic scope triggers weak NPIs
  • Strengthening effects motivate licensing NPIs in
    non-monotonic contexts
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