International audienceThe experimental pragmatics literature has extensively investigated the ways in which distinct contextual factors affect the computation of scalar inferences, whose most studied example is the one that allows “Some X-ed” to mean Not all X-ed. Recent studies from Bonnefon et al. (2009, 2011) investigate the effect of politeness on the interpretation of scalar utterances. They argue that when the scalar utterance is face-threatening (“Some people hated your speech”) (i) the scalar inference is less likely to be derived, and (ii) the semantic interpretation of “some” (at least some) is arrived at slowly and effortfully. This paper re-evaluates the role of politeness in the computation of scalar inferences by drawing on th...
Understanding language involves making inferences. One type of inference are scalar implicatures, e....
Applied to uncertainty communication, politeness theory postulates that when announcing bad news (1)...
The language used in conversation is prone to differences in interpretation. The interpretation can...
International audienceThe experimental pragmatics literature has extensively investigated the ways i...
International audienceIn polite contexts, people find it difficult to perceive whether they can deri...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. of Brain and Cognitive Sciences and Dept. of Linguis...
Scalar inferences are commonly generated when a speaker uses a weaker expression rather than a stron...
Scalar inference, the process by which we infer meanings stronger than what was explicitly said, has...
Scalar implicatures have enjoyed the status of one of the most researched topics in both theoretical...
In the present study we propose a context wherein the endorsement rate of the scalar inference from ...
When Tarzan asks Jane Do you like my friends? and Jane answers Some of them, her underinformative re...
Speakers may convey many sorts of \u27meaning\u27 via an utterance. While each of these contributes ...
Scalar implicatures are traditionally viewed as pragmatic inferences which result from a reasoning a...
Scalar inference (SI), e.g., utterances containing the quantifier some being enriched to mean some b...
A highly emblematic paradigm in experimental pragmatics consists in presenting participants with an ...
Understanding language involves making inferences. One type of inference are scalar implicatures, e....
Applied to uncertainty communication, politeness theory postulates that when announcing bad news (1)...
The language used in conversation is prone to differences in interpretation. The interpretation can...
International audienceThe experimental pragmatics literature has extensively investigated the ways i...
International audienceIn polite contexts, people find it difficult to perceive whether they can deri...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. of Brain and Cognitive Sciences and Dept. of Linguis...
Scalar inferences are commonly generated when a speaker uses a weaker expression rather than a stron...
Scalar inference, the process by which we infer meanings stronger than what was explicitly said, has...
Scalar implicatures have enjoyed the status of one of the most researched topics in both theoretical...
In the present study we propose a context wherein the endorsement rate of the scalar inference from ...
When Tarzan asks Jane Do you like my friends? and Jane answers Some of them, her underinformative re...
Speakers may convey many sorts of \u27meaning\u27 via an utterance. While each of these contributes ...
Scalar implicatures are traditionally viewed as pragmatic inferences which result from a reasoning a...
Scalar inference (SI), e.g., utterances containing the quantifier some being enriched to mean some b...
A highly emblematic paradigm in experimental pragmatics consists in presenting participants with an ...
Understanding language involves making inferences. One type of inference are scalar implicatures, e....
Applied to uncertainty communication, politeness theory postulates that when announcing bad news (1)...
The language used in conversation is prone to differences in interpretation. The interpretation can...