Negation is a sine qua non of every human language but is absent from otherwise complex systems of animal communication. In many ways, it is negation that makes us human, imbuing us with the capacity to deny, to contradict, to misrepresent, to lie, and to convey irony. The apparent simplicity of logical negation as a one-place operator that toggles truth and falsity belies the intricate complexity of the expression of negation in natural language. Not only do we find negative adverbs, verbs, copulas, quantifiers, and affixes, but the interaction of negation with other operators (including multiple iterations of negation itself) can be exceedingly complex to describe, extending (as first detailed by Otto Jespersen) to negative concord, negative incorporation, and the widespread occurrence of negative polarity items whose distribution is subject to principles of syntax, semantics, and pragmatics. The chapters in this book survey the patterning of negative utterances in natural languages, spanning such foundational issues as how negative sentences are realized cross-linguistically and how that realization tends to change over time, how negation is acquired by children, how it is processed by adults, and how its expression changes over time. Specific chapters offer focused empirical studies of negative polarity, pleonastic negation, and negative/quantifier scope interaction, as well as detailed examinations of the form and function of sentential negation in modern Romance languages and Classical Japanese.
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Weitere Infos & Material
1;Contents;6
2;Introduction;8
3;Typology of negation;16
4;The Acquisition of Negation;46
5;On the diachrony of negation;80
6;Multiple negation in English and other languages;118
7;Quantifier-negation interaction in English: A corpus linguistic study of all...not constructions;156
8;Negative and positive polarity items: An investigation of the interplay of lexical meaning and global conditions on expression;194
9;Negation as a metaphor-inducing operator;232
10;Negation in Classical Japanese;264
11;Negation and polarity in the new millennium: A bibliography;294
12;Contributors;338
13;Index of subjects;340
14;Index of languages;342
15;Index of persons;344
Laurence R. Horn, Yale University, New Haven, USA.