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Leibniz Dream: Children's comprehension of conjunctive expressions in Hungarian ...
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Leibniz Dream: Children's comprehension of conjunctive expressions in Georgian. ...
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Children's production of quantifiers as sentence initial subjects in German and Italian ...
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'Believe' is Strong but Subjective: Experimental Evidence from Hedging
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In: Sinn und Bedeutung; Bd. 25 (2021): Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung 25; 497-514 ; Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung; Vol 25 (2021): Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung 25; 497-514 ; 2629-6055 (2021)
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Verum accent IS VERUM, but not always focus
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In: Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; Vol 6, No 1 (2021): Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America; 188–202 ; 2473-8689 (2021)
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Comprehension of the Presupposition Trigger Ye "Also" by Mandarin-Speaking Preschoolers With and Without Autism Spectrum Disorders
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In: Frontiers in Psychology ; 11 (2020). - 570453. - Frontiers Research Foundation. - eISSN 1664-1078 (2020)
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Reluctant Acceptance of the Literal Truth: Eye Tracking in the Covered Box Paradigm
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In: Sinn und Bedeutung; Bd. 20 (2016): Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung 20; 61-78 ; Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung; Vol 20 (2016): Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung 20; 61-78 ; 2629-6055 (2019)
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Scalar implicatures processing: slowly accepting the truth (literally)
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In: Sinn und Bedeutung; Bd. 19 (2015): Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung 19; 573-590 ; Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung; Vol 19 (2015): Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung 19; 573-590 ; 2629-6055 (2019)
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Homogeneity or implicature : an experimental investigation of free choice
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Homogeneity or implicature: An experimental investigation of free choice
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In: Semantics and Linguistic Theory; Proceedings of SALT 29; 706-726 ; 2163-5951 (2019)
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Abstract:
A sentence containing disjunction in the scope of a possibility modal, such as Angie is allowed to buy the boat or the car, gives rise to the FREE CHOICE inference that Angie can freely choose between the two. This inference poses a well-known puzzle, in that it is not predicted by a standard treatment of modals and disjunction (e.g., Kamp 1974). To complicate things further, FREE CHOICE tends to disappear under negation: Angie is not allowed to buy the boat or the car doesn't merely convey the negation of free choice, but rather the stronger DUAL PROHIBITION reading that Angie cannot buy either one. There are two main approaches to the FREE CHOICE-DUAL PROHIBITION pattern in the literature. While they both capture the relevant data points, they make a testable, divergent prediction regarding the status of positive and negative sentences in a context in which Angie can only buy one of the two objects, e.g., the boat. In particular, the implicature-based approach (e.g., Fox 2007; Klinedinst 2007; Bar-Lev & Fox 2017) predicts that the positive sentence is true in such a context, but associated with a false implicature, while it predicts the negative sentence to be straightforwardly false. The alternative approach (e.g., Aloni 2018; Goldstein 2018; Willer 2017) predicts both the positive and negative sentences to be equally undefined. Investigating the contrast between these sentences in such a context therefore provides a clear way to address the debate between implicature and non-implicature accounts of FREE CHOICE. We present an experiment aiming to do just this, the results of which present a challenge for the implicature approach. We further discuss how the implicature approach could in theory be developed to account for our results, based on a recent proposal by Enguehard & Chemla (2018) on the distribution of implicatures.
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URL: https://doi.org/10.3765/salt.v29i0.4631 http://journals.linguisticsociety.org/proceedings/index.php/SALT/article/view/29.706
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On children's variable success with scalar inferences : insights from disjunction in the scope of a universal quantifier
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Developmental insights into gappy phenomena : comparing presupposition, implicature, homogeneity, and vagueness
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Children take only some sentences literally: investigating children's variable performance with scalar inferences
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Bill, Cory. - : Sydney, Australia : Macquarie University, 2017
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Scalar implicatures versus presuppositions : the view from acquisition
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Presupposition projection from the scope of none : universal, existential, or both?
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Presupposition projection from the scope of None: Universal, existential, or both?
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In: Semantics and Linguistic Theory; Proceedings of SALT 26; 754-774 ; 2163-5951 (2016)
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Existential presupposition projection from none? : an experimental investigation
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