Linguistik
Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (25)
- Working Paper (6)
- Other (5)
- Part of a Book (3)
- Preprint (2)
- Book (1)
Keywords
- Englisch (3)
- Deutsch (2)
- Bulgarisch (1)
- Griechisch (1)
- Intonation <Linguistik> (1)
- Japanisch (1)
-
Hardt's surprising sloppy readings : a flat binding account
(2008)
- The paper presents an additional argument for a specific account of semantic binding: the flat-binding analysis. The argument is based on observations concerning sloppy interpretations in verb phrase ellipsis when the binder is not the subject of the elided VP. In one such case, it is important that one of the binders belong to the domain of the other. This case can be derived from the flat-binding analysis as is shown in the paper, while it is unclear how to account for it within other analyses of semantic binding.
- Implicated presuppositions (2008)
-
On greek illusions: a semantic account of Alexopoulou’s generalization
(2008)
- Alexopoulou (2008) argues that Greek provides new evidence for the concept of binding illusions that was hypothesized by Fox and Sauerland (1996). Of special interest from my perspective is Alexopoulou’s argument that binding illusions arise not only with existential and universal quantifiers, but also with negative and interrogative quantifiers. The purpose of this note is to speculate on how to account for these kinds of binding illusions semantically building on Alexopoulou’s argument. In the following I refer to Alexopoulou’s (2008) paper as BIRG (Binding Illusions and Resumption in Greek) and to Clitic Left-Dislocation as CLLD. BIRG’s argument is based on the generalization concerning CLLD in Greek. Generally, a left-dislocated noun phrase cannot bind a pronoun in its clause in Greek.
- Beyond unpluggability (2007)
- Compositionality (2007)
-
Embedded evidentials in bulgarian
(2007)
- We consider evidentials embedded in complement clauses with new data from Bulgarian. For Tibetan, Garrett has shown that embedded evidentials are always shifted to the perspective of the reported speech. In Bulgarian, we show that such a shift is almost never possible. This shows that Bulgarian evidentials should not be analyzed as modals, but rather as presuppositional.
- Presupposition (2007)
- Traces (2007)
- Decomposing questions acts (2006)
