Mandarin SHENME as a superweak NPI
| Authors | |
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| Publication date | 2014 |
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| Book title | Black book: a festschrift in honor of Frans Zwarts |
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| Pages (from-to) | 229-251 |
| Number of pages | 23 |
| Publisher | Groningen: University of Groningen |
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| Abstract |
In the past thirty years, Frans Zwarts has written several papers providing crucial insight in licensing contexts for Negative Polarity Items (NPIs), presenting a more nuanced picture than Ladusaw’s (1979) downward entailing (DE) requirement. Zwarts demonstrated (1981) that a number of Dutch NPIs appear only in a subset of DE-contexts, and proposed (1995) non-veridicality as a logico-semantic property that licenses so-called superweak NPIs. Such superweak NPIs, however, have hardly been attested. We show that Mandarin shenme (‘a (thing)’) is a prototypical superweak NPI. We explain its ungrammaticality in veridical contexts by arguing that shenme exhibits a lexical referential deficiency. Acquisitional data, furthermore, suggest that children initially analyze shenme as a WH-quantifier but acquire the referential deficiency underlying its NPI status after the age of four.
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| Document type | Chapter |
| Language | English |
| Downloads |
Mandarin shenme as a superweak NPI
(Accepted author manuscript)
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