The Germanic languages allow floating negated quantifiers (The children have not all not eaten) while the Romance languages do not. The Germanic languages also allow negation to take inverse scope over a universal quantifier (All the children have not eaten) whereas the Romance languages are very restrictive in their handling of ∀¬ word order. Based mainly on the theory of negation in Zeijlstra (2004), the Stranding Analysis of floating quantifiers of Sportiche (1988) and Giusti (1990), and the Neg Stranding Hypothesis of Cirillo (2009), it will be argued that these two differences between Germanic and Romance are attributable to one sole difference: Negation is a functional category in Romance but not in Germanic
Introduction. Linguistic research has clearly shown that natural languages exhibit different forms o...
Introduction. Linguistic research has clearly shown that natural languages exhibit different forms o...
Introduction. Linguistic research has clearly shown that natural languages exhibit different forms o...
Universal quantifiers can be stranded in the manner described by Sportiche (1988), Giusti (1990) and...
Languages that are genealogically or areally related often exhibit similar typological features due ...
Negation in Romance offers a wide array of cross-linguistic variation. For what concerns sentential ...
Negation in Romance offers a wide array of cross-linguistic variation. For what concerns sentential ...
Negation in Romance offers a wide array of cross-linguistic variation. For what concerns sentential ...
This presentation explores the relations between the different patterns of negation in a number of R...
Every natural language can express the negation of a proposition p. However, while the semantic resu...
This article focuses on the formal expression of sentential negation in the Germanic languages and i...
In this paper, we discuss negation in several languages of the same family—languages which are strik...
This article focuses on the formal expression of sentential negation in the Germanic languages and i...
Traditionally, typological classifications have been done in a macro-typological perspective; that i...
Traditionally, typological classifications have been done in a macro-typological perspective; that i...
Introduction. Linguistic research has clearly shown that natural languages exhibit different forms o...
Introduction. Linguistic research has clearly shown that natural languages exhibit different forms o...
Introduction. Linguistic research has clearly shown that natural languages exhibit different forms o...
Universal quantifiers can be stranded in the manner described by Sportiche (1988), Giusti (1990) and...
Languages that are genealogically or areally related often exhibit similar typological features due ...
Negation in Romance offers a wide array of cross-linguistic variation. For what concerns sentential ...
Negation in Romance offers a wide array of cross-linguistic variation. For what concerns sentential ...
Negation in Romance offers a wide array of cross-linguistic variation. For what concerns sentential ...
This presentation explores the relations between the different patterns of negation in a number of R...
Every natural language can express the negation of a proposition p. However, while the semantic resu...
This article focuses on the formal expression of sentential negation in the Germanic languages and i...
In this paper, we discuss negation in several languages of the same family—languages which are strik...
This article focuses on the formal expression of sentential negation in the Germanic languages and i...
Traditionally, typological classifications have been done in a macro-typological perspective; that i...
Traditionally, typological classifications have been done in a macro-typological perspective; that i...
Introduction. Linguistic research has clearly shown that natural languages exhibit different forms o...
Introduction. Linguistic research has clearly shown that natural languages exhibit different forms o...
Introduction. Linguistic research has clearly shown that natural languages exhibit different forms o...