Formal and philological inquiries into the nature of interrogatives, indefinites, disjunction, and focus in Sinhala and other languages
In this thesis I examine a variety of linguistic elements which involve ``alternative'' semantic values---a class arguably including focus, interrogatives, indefinites, and disjunctions---and the connections between these elements. This study focusses on the analysis of such elements in Si...
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Other Authors: | , , , |
Format: | Article in Journal/Newspaper |
Language: | English |
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2011
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/2142/26068 |
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author | Slade, Benjamin M. |
author2 | Hock, Hans Henrich Yoon, Hye Suk James Lasersohn, Peter N. Arregi, Karlos |
author_facet | Slade, Benjamin M. |
author_sort | Slade, Benjamin M. |
collection | Unknown |
description | In this thesis I examine a variety of linguistic elements which involve ``alternative'' semantic values---a class arguably including focus, interrogatives, indefinites, and disjunctions---and the connections between these elements. This study focusses on the analysis of such elements in Sinhala, with comparison to Malayalam, Tlingit, and Japanese. The central part of the study concerns the proper syntactic and semantic analysis of Q[uestion]-particles (including Sinhala "da", Malayalam "-oo", Japanese "ka"), which, in many languages, appear not only in interrogatives, but also in the formation of indefinites, disjunctions, and relative clauses. This set of contexts is syntactically-heterogeneous, and so syntax does not offer an explanation for the appearance of Q-particles in this particular set of environments. I propose that these contexts can be united in terms of semantics, as all involving some element which denotes a set of ``alternatives''. Both wh-words and disjunctions can be analysed as creating Hamblin-type sets of ``alternatives''. Q-particles can be treated as uniformly denoting variables over choice functions which apply to the aforementioned Hamblin-type sets, thus ``restoring'' the derivation to normal Montagovian semantics. The treatment of Q-particles as uniformly denoting variables over choice functions provides an explanation for why these particles appear in just this set of contexts: they all include an element with Hamblin-type semantics. However, we also find variation in the use of Q-particles; including, in some languages, the appearance of multiple morphologically-distinct Q-particles in different syntactic contexts. Such variation can be handled largely by positing that Q-particles may vary in their formal syntactic feature specifications, determining which syntactic contexts they are licensed in. The unified analysis of Q-particles as denoting variables over choice functions also raises various questions about the proper analysis of interrogatives, indefinites, and disjunctions, ... |
format | Article in Journal/Newspaper |
genre | tlingit |
genre_facet | tlingit |
id | fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:http://hdl.handle.net/2142/26068 |
institution | Open Polar |
language | English |
op_collection_id | fttriple |
op_relation | http://hdl.handle.net/2142/26068 |
op_source | IDEALS |
publishDate | 2011 |
record_format | openpolar |
spelling | fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:http://hdl.handle.net/2142/26068 2025-01-17T01:07:22+00:00 Formal and philological inquiries into the nature of interrogatives, indefinites, disjunction, and focus in Sinhala and other languages Slade, Benjamin M. Hock, Hans Henrich Yoon, Hye Suk James Lasersohn, Peter N. Arregi, Karlos 2011-08-25 http://hdl.handle.net/2142/26068 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/2142/26068 IDEALS lang phil Journal Article https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_6501/ 2011 fttriple 2023-01-22T18:45:35Z In this thesis I examine a variety of linguistic elements which involve ``alternative'' semantic values---a class arguably including focus, interrogatives, indefinites, and disjunctions---and the connections between these elements. This study focusses on the analysis of such elements in Sinhala, with comparison to Malayalam, Tlingit, and Japanese. The central part of the study concerns the proper syntactic and semantic analysis of Q[uestion]-particles (including Sinhala "da", Malayalam "-oo", Japanese "ka"), which, in many languages, appear not only in interrogatives, but also in the formation of indefinites, disjunctions, and relative clauses. This set of contexts is syntactically-heterogeneous, and so syntax does not offer an explanation for the appearance of Q-particles in this particular set of environments. I propose that these contexts can be united in terms of semantics, as all involving some element which denotes a set of ``alternatives''. Both wh-words and disjunctions can be analysed as creating Hamblin-type sets of ``alternatives''. Q-particles can be treated as uniformly denoting variables over choice functions which apply to the aforementioned Hamblin-type sets, thus ``restoring'' the derivation to normal Montagovian semantics. The treatment of Q-particles as uniformly denoting variables over choice functions provides an explanation for why these particles appear in just this set of contexts: they all include an element with Hamblin-type semantics. However, we also find variation in the use of Q-particles; including, in some languages, the appearance of multiple morphologically-distinct Q-particles in different syntactic contexts. Such variation can be handled largely by positing that Q-particles may vary in their formal syntactic feature specifications, determining which syntactic contexts they are licensed in. The unified analysis of Q-particles as denoting variables over choice functions also raises various questions about the proper analysis of interrogatives, indefinites, and disjunctions, ... Article in Journal/Newspaper tlingit Unknown |
spellingShingle | lang phil Slade, Benjamin M. Formal and philological inquiries into the nature of interrogatives, indefinites, disjunction, and focus in Sinhala and other languages |
title | Formal and philological inquiries into the nature of interrogatives, indefinites, disjunction, and focus in Sinhala and other languages |
title_full | Formal and philological inquiries into the nature of interrogatives, indefinites, disjunction, and focus in Sinhala and other languages |
title_fullStr | Formal and philological inquiries into the nature of interrogatives, indefinites, disjunction, and focus in Sinhala and other languages |
title_full_unstemmed | Formal and philological inquiries into the nature of interrogatives, indefinites, disjunction, and focus in Sinhala and other languages |
title_short | Formal and philological inquiries into the nature of interrogatives, indefinites, disjunction, and focus in Sinhala and other languages |
title_sort | formal and philological inquiries into the nature of interrogatives, indefinites, disjunction, and focus in sinhala and other languages |
topic | lang phil |
topic_facet | lang phil |
url | http://hdl.handle.net/2142/26068 |