Three types of nominal anaphors are investigated: (i) pronouns, (ii) partitive ellipsis and (iii) the contrastive anaphor `one'. I argue that in each case, the representational basis for anaphora is the same, a semantic variable ranging over singular or plural entities, rather than syntactic as previous approaches have suggested. In the case of pronouns, I argue against syntactic D-type approaches (Elbourne 2005) and semantic D-type approaches (Cooper 1979). Instead, I present arguments in favor of the set variable representation assumed under Nouwen (2003)'s approach. Following this, I consider a number of cases usually taken to involve the elision of a noun phrase, and argue that instead they involve the deletion of a partitive phrase c...
When people talk or write, they refer to things, objects, events, actions, facts and/or states that ...
Pronominal anaphora is a phenomenon that has been studied from many different perspectives and withi...
We argue in this paper that many common adverbial phrases generally taken to be discourse connective...
The nominal anaphoric element one has figured prominently in discussions of linguistic na-tivism bec...
This thesis investigates English personal pronoun reference in particular focusing on cataphora (bac...
1. Introduction / 2. Previous Approaches / 3. Computational Processes of Pronouns and Ellipses: Same...
Just as pronouns like she and he make anaphoric reference to individuals, English words like that an...
An adequate conception of anaphora is still a desideratum. Considering the anaphoric use of third-pe...
The nominal anaphoric element one has figured prominently in discussions of linguistic nativism beca...
The nature of personal pronouns is different from one language to another. In many languages, person...
In this paper I make a case for a separate treatment of (singular) anaphoric pronouns within a predi...
Research has shown that following a sentence fragment such as John impressed Mary because..., people...
Research has shown that following a sentence fragment such as John impressed Mary because…, people a...
This paper tackles the fundamental question of what an anaphor actually is – and asks whether the la...
Numerous papers have used so-called 'missing antecedent phenomena' as a criterion for distinguishing...
When people talk or write, they refer to things, objects, events, actions, facts and/or states that ...
Pronominal anaphora is a phenomenon that has been studied from many different perspectives and withi...
We argue in this paper that many common adverbial phrases generally taken to be discourse connective...
The nominal anaphoric element one has figured prominently in discussions of linguistic na-tivism bec...
This thesis investigates English personal pronoun reference in particular focusing on cataphora (bac...
1. Introduction / 2. Previous Approaches / 3. Computational Processes of Pronouns and Ellipses: Same...
Just as pronouns like she and he make anaphoric reference to individuals, English words like that an...
An adequate conception of anaphora is still a desideratum. Considering the anaphoric use of third-pe...
The nominal anaphoric element one has figured prominently in discussions of linguistic nativism beca...
The nature of personal pronouns is different from one language to another. In many languages, person...
In this paper I make a case for a separate treatment of (singular) anaphoric pronouns within a predi...
Research has shown that following a sentence fragment such as John impressed Mary because..., people...
Research has shown that following a sentence fragment such as John impressed Mary because…, people a...
This paper tackles the fundamental question of what an anaphor actually is – and asks whether the la...
Numerous papers have used so-called 'missing antecedent phenomena' as a criterion for distinguishing...
When people talk or write, they refer to things, objects, events, actions, facts and/or states that ...
Pronominal anaphora is a phenomenon that has been studied from many different perspectives and withi...
We argue in this paper that many common adverbial phrases generally taken to be discourse connective...