1st Edition

Downward Entailing and Chinese Polarity Items

By Li Chen Copyright 2018
    134 Pages
    by Routledge

    134 Pages
    by Routledge

    Polarity phenomena are pervasively observed in natural languages. Previous studies on Chinese polarity items are mainly in line with the non-veridicality approach. This book, however, employs the downward-entailing hypothesis as its analytical foundation, and argues that downward entailment is the only licensor for different kinds of Chinese polarity items, and non-veridicality is neither a necessary nor sufficient condition and thus offers inferior explanatory power compared with the former.





    To begin with, it lays the groundwork for this research by presenting a brief introduction to polarity phenomena and reviewing the existing relevant theories. Then it addresses the status of the commonly used element dou in Chinese. Specifically, it applies the tripartite structural frame to the studies of dou, and examines the role of dou in licensing the polarity items. Moreover, it investigates the properties and behavior of dou with respect to modality. Based on the analysis above, it observes that non-interrogative wh-indeterminates in Chinese can be licensed in the restriction domain of a necessity operator. Also, the non-uniformity of three Chinese polarity items, i.e., shenme, na-CL, and renhe, is scrutinized within the downward-entailing framework.





    This book will appeal to scholars, teachers and students in the field of linguistics, especially in the areas of formal semantics and generative grammar. Researchers and engineers in cloud computing and big data who are seeking help from linguistic contributions to meaning and logic will also benefit from it.

    Ackonwledgemetns



    List of abbreviations 



    Chapter 1 Polarity Theories and Polarity Phenomena



    Chapter 2 Non-veridicality Approach and the Challenge from Dou Sentences 



    Chapter 3 Tripartite Structure and Dou  



    Chapter 4 Downward Entailment Approach 



    Chapter 5 Dou as a Necessity Operator



    Chapter 6 The Non-uniformity of Chinese Polarity Items 



    Chapter 7 Conclusions 



    References



    Index

    Biography

    Li Chen is an Assistant Professor in the School of Humanities, Shanghai Jiao Tong University. Her research interests lie in syntax, formal semantics and psycholinguistics.