What projects and why 论文

2010Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory引用 393
Syntax, Semantics, Linguistic VariationNatural Language Processing TechniquesLinguistics and Discourse Analysis

详细信息

发表期刊/会议
Proceedings from Semantics and Linguistic Theory
发表日期
2010-08-14
发表年份
2010

关键词

Syntax, Semantics, Linguistic VariationNatural Language Processing TechniquesLinguistics and Discourse Analysis

摘要

Projection is widely used as a diagnostic for presupposition, but many expression types yield projection even though they do not have standard properties of presupposition, for example appositives, expressives, and honorifics (Potts 2005). While it is possible to analyze projection piecemeal, clearly a unitary explanation is to be preferred. Yet we show that standard explanations of projective behavior (common ground based theories, anaphoric theories, and multi-dimensional theories) do not extend to the full range of triggers. Instead, we propose an alternative explanation based on the following claim: Meanings project IFF they are not at-issue, where at-issueness is defined in terms of the Roberts' (1995) discourse theory. Thus, and despite their apparent heterogeneity, projective meaning triggers emerge as a natural class on the basis of the not at-issue status of their projective inference.