A notion of linguistic scale is examined in connection with some scalar quantificational determiners such as all, most, many, and some in English and their correspondents in Korean. The widely-used definition of scale which is based on the identity of syntactic category and the linear ordering by the degree of semantic strength among the scalar predicates is not adequate enough to explain some set of facts about implicature and entailment that involve quantificational determiners. Attention is paid to many and most (in English and in Korean) that require a context parameter to get properly interpreted. They should be represented not as occupying a point on a scale but as occupying some interval. I also suggest that the properties of a scala...
One of the most studied scales in the literature on scalar implicatures is the quantifier scale. Whi...
Scalar inference (SI), e.g., utterances containing the quantifier some being enriched to mean some b...
While most research on scalar implicature has focused on the lexical scale “some” vs “all,” here we ...
PACLIC / The University of the Philippines Visayas Cebu College Cebu City, Philippines / November 20...
Despite the rich theoretical and experimental work on scalar implicature, many of the studies on thi...
One of the most studied scales in the literature on scalar implicatures is the quantifier scale. Whi...
Scalar inference (SI), the process by which we systematically infer meanings stronger than what was ...
Quantitative scales—orderings on linguistic expressions by logical entailment— have long interested ...
This study looks into the scalar properties exhibited by some grammaticalized (and subsequently prag...
The relationship between semantic and pragmatic interpretation has been a perennial puzzle in psycho...
International audienceScalar implicatures, the phenomena where a sentence like "The pianist played s...
Scalar inference, the process by which we infer meanings stronger than what was explicitly said, has...
I explore first language acquisition of scalar implicatures as a class of meanings. I begin by propo...
While for relative gradable adjectives the value on the underlying measurement scale that serves as ...
Understanding language involves making inferences. One type of inference are scalar implicatures, e....
One of the most studied scales in the literature on scalar implicatures is the quantifier scale. Whi...
Scalar inference (SI), e.g., utterances containing the quantifier some being enriched to mean some b...
While most research on scalar implicature has focused on the lexical scale “some” vs “all,” here we ...
PACLIC / The University of the Philippines Visayas Cebu College Cebu City, Philippines / November 20...
Despite the rich theoretical and experimental work on scalar implicature, many of the studies on thi...
One of the most studied scales in the literature on scalar implicatures is the quantifier scale. Whi...
Scalar inference (SI), the process by which we systematically infer meanings stronger than what was ...
Quantitative scales—orderings on linguistic expressions by logical entailment— have long interested ...
This study looks into the scalar properties exhibited by some grammaticalized (and subsequently prag...
The relationship between semantic and pragmatic interpretation has been a perennial puzzle in psycho...
International audienceScalar implicatures, the phenomena where a sentence like "The pianist played s...
Scalar inference, the process by which we infer meanings stronger than what was explicitly said, has...
I explore first language acquisition of scalar implicatures as a class of meanings. I begin by propo...
While for relative gradable adjectives the value on the underlying measurement scale that serves as ...
Understanding language involves making inferences. One type of inference are scalar implicatures, e....
One of the most studied scales in the literature on scalar implicatures is the quantifier scale. Whi...
Scalar inference (SI), e.g., utterances containing the quantifier some being enriched to mean some b...
While most research on scalar implicature has focused on the lexical scale “some” vs “all,” here we ...