Publication | Open Access
Spurious NPI licensing and exhaustification
49
Citations
16
References
2018
Year
LawOutright AbsenceTechnology LawSemanticsSyntactic StructureSpurious Npi LicensingSpeech ActSyntaxGrammarLanguage StudiesGrammatical FormalismIndustrial ApplicabilityRegulationC–commanding LicensorPragmaticsRegulatory RequirementBusiness Method PatentPhilosophy Of LanguageFormal SyntaxLinguistics
Under certain circumstances, speakers are subject to so-called spurious NPI licensing effects, whereby they perceive that NPIs without a c–commanding licensor are in fact licensed and grammatical. Previous studies have all involved the presence of a licensor in a position that linearly precedes, but does not c–command the NPI. In this paper, we show that spurious NPI licensing can occur in the outright absence of a licensor, in contexts that force an exhaustive parse. We reason that at least these instances of spurious NPI licensing might be reduced to the E XH operator pragmatically “rescuing” the NPI, in the sense of Giannakidou (1998, 2006).
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1