In addition to serving as question markers with interrogative force, wh-words such as shenme 'what' in Mandarin Chinese have a noninterrogative meaning. For the noninterrogative meaning, these words have been typically analyzed as negative polarity items, i.e., as wh-pronouns that are similar in meaning to the English NPI any and to its Mandarin counterpart renhe. This accounts for the None reading that is generated in negative statements with wh-words. However, negative sentences with the wh-word shenme 'what' can also be assigned another reading, in certain circumstances. We refer to this as the Insignificance (not much) reading. This reading is not possible for sentences with the NPI renhe. The None reading is the default interpretation ...
This study investigated children's knowledge of double negation in Mandarin Chinese. Double negation...
Thesis by publication.Contains bibliographical references.Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: When...
Languages vary in the ways in which words for conjunction and words for disjunctionare interpreted i...
"A thesis submitted to the Department of Cognitive Science in partial fulfilment of the requirement ...
The present study investigated Mandarin-speaking children's acquisition of the polarity sensitive it...
This paper offers a semantic analysis of the 'insignificance' reading observed in negative sentences...
In the past thirty years, Frans Zwarts has written several papers providing crucial insight in licen...
Mandarin Chinese wh-pronouns are often analyzed as Negative Polarity Items (NPIs). The present study...
Theoretical thesis.Includes bibliographical references.Chapter 1. Introduction -- Chapter 2. On the ...
Chinese wh-words are ambiguous; they can be used as existential polarity words (EPW), as in (2), as ...
In Chinese, the polarity sensitive (PS) renhe 'any' can occur only in negative polarity contexts suc...
This paper presents new experimental results obtained from 88 Mandarin speaking children (2; 11 – 4;...
The present study investigated the relationship between lexical aspect and the use of negation by Ma...
This work investigates the non-interrogative uses of Chinese wh-phrases as a path to understand the ...
xxii, 214 leavesThis dissertation reports on five experimental studies investigating the first and s...
This study investigated children's knowledge of double negation in Mandarin Chinese. Double negation...
Thesis by publication.Contains bibliographical references.Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: When...
Languages vary in the ways in which words for conjunction and words for disjunctionare interpreted i...
"A thesis submitted to the Department of Cognitive Science in partial fulfilment of the requirement ...
The present study investigated Mandarin-speaking children's acquisition of the polarity sensitive it...
This paper offers a semantic analysis of the 'insignificance' reading observed in negative sentences...
In the past thirty years, Frans Zwarts has written several papers providing crucial insight in licen...
Mandarin Chinese wh-pronouns are often analyzed as Negative Polarity Items (NPIs). The present study...
Theoretical thesis.Includes bibliographical references.Chapter 1. Introduction -- Chapter 2. On the ...
Chinese wh-words are ambiguous; they can be used as existential polarity words (EPW), as in (2), as ...
In Chinese, the polarity sensitive (PS) renhe 'any' can occur only in negative polarity contexts suc...
This paper presents new experimental results obtained from 88 Mandarin speaking children (2; 11 – 4;...
The present study investigated the relationship between lexical aspect and the use of negation by Ma...
This work investigates the non-interrogative uses of Chinese wh-phrases as a path to understand the ...
xxii, 214 leavesThis dissertation reports on five experimental studies investigating the first and s...
This study investigated children's knowledge of double negation in Mandarin Chinese. Double negation...
Thesis by publication.Contains bibliographical references.Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: When...
Languages vary in the ways in which words for conjunction and words for disjunctionare interpreted i...