International audienceThis paper investigates the parameters of variation in the area of semantically dependent indefinites, by focusing on the distribution of the Romanian dependent determiner 'vreun'. Refining previous descriptions in the literature (Farkas 2002, 2006), I argue that the occurrence of 'vreun' in intensional contexts is sensitive to epistemic alternatives. To account for this, I endorse the unitary approach to polarity-sensitivity due to Chierchia (2006) and argue that the differences between 'vreun' and other dependent indefinites stem from the types of alternatives they activate and the way these alternatives contribute to the overall meaning
The chapter proposes an account of epistemic indefinites cross-linguistically, focusing on the case ...
Abstract This paper presents an analysis of a new scope puzzle that arises through the interaction o...
Indefinites are known to give rise to different scopal (specific vs non-specific) and epistemic (kno...
International audienceThis paper investigates the parameters of variation in the area of semanticall...
International audienceThis paper investigates the parameters of variation in the area of semanticall...
International audienceThis paper contributes to the semantic typology of dependent indefinites, by a...
This paper focuses on the properties of the Romanian determiner \u27vreun\u27, and has two objective...
International audienceThis paper contributes to the semantic typology of dependent indefinites, by a...
International audienceIn this paper, we examine the properties of the Romanian dependent indefinite ...
International audienceEpistemic indefinites (EIs) are typically defined as existentials that convey ...
I discuss the distribution and interpretation of the Romanian determiner vreun and analyze it as a s...
International audienceEpistemic indefinites (EIs) have been shown to trigger different free choice e...
International audienceEpistemic indefinites (EIs) have been shown to trigger different free choice e...
International audienceEpistemic indefinites (EIs) have been shown to trigger different free choice e...
International audienceEpistemic indefinites (EIs) have been shown to trigger different free choice e...
The chapter proposes an account of epistemic indefinites cross-linguistically, focusing on the case ...
Abstract This paper presents an analysis of a new scope puzzle that arises through the interaction o...
Indefinites are known to give rise to different scopal (specific vs non-specific) and epistemic (kno...
International audienceThis paper investigates the parameters of variation in the area of semanticall...
International audienceThis paper investigates the parameters of variation in the area of semanticall...
International audienceThis paper contributes to the semantic typology of dependent indefinites, by a...
This paper focuses on the properties of the Romanian determiner \u27vreun\u27, and has two objective...
International audienceThis paper contributes to the semantic typology of dependent indefinites, by a...
International audienceIn this paper, we examine the properties of the Romanian dependent indefinite ...
International audienceEpistemic indefinites (EIs) are typically defined as existentials that convey ...
I discuss the distribution and interpretation of the Romanian determiner vreun and analyze it as a s...
International audienceEpistemic indefinites (EIs) have been shown to trigger different free choice e...
International audienceEpistemic indefinites (EIs) have been shown to trigger different free choice e...
International audienceEpistemic indefinites (EIs) have been shown to trigger different free choice e...
International audienceEpistemic indefinites (EIs) have been shown to trigger different free choice e...
The chapter proposes an account of epistemic indefinites cross-linguistically, focusing on the case ...
Abstract This paper presents an analysis of a new scope puzzle that arises through the interaction o...
Indefinites are known to give rise to different scopal (specific vs non-specific) and epistemic (kno...