GEHRKE, Berit and Marcin WĄGIEL. On word order and non-conservative percentage quantification in Slavic and German. GLOSSA-A JOURNAL OF GENERAL LINGUISTICS. ENGLAND: UBIQUITY PRESS LTD, 2023, vol. 8, No 1, p. 1-48. ISSN 2397-1835. Available from: https://dx.doi.org/10.16995/glossa.5803.
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Basic information
Original name On word order and non-conservative percentage quantification in Slavic and German
Authors GEHRKE, Berit (276 Germany) and Marcin WĄGIEL (616 Poland, guarantor, belonging to the institution).
Edition GLOSSA-A JOURNAL OF GENERAL LINGUISTICS, ENGLAND, UBIQUITY PRESS LTD, 2023, 2397-1835.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Article in a journal
Field of Study 60203 Linguistics
Country of publisher United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
WWW Plný text výsledku na webových stránkách časopisu
Impact factor Impact factor: 1.000 in 2022
RIV identification code RIV/00216224:14210/23:00134044
Organization unit Faculty of Arts
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.16995/glossa.5803
UT WoS 000993919600003
Keywords in English conservativity; percentage quantifier; information structure; word order; relative measurement; proportion
Tags rivok
Tags International impact, Reviewed
Changed by Changed by: Mgr. et Mgr. Lucie Racyn, učo 445546. Changed: 6/2/2024 10:36.
Abstract
This paper discusses conservative and non-conservative construals of percentage quantifiers (%Qs), e.g., 50% of the women vs. 50% women, in Slavic and German. Based on data from corpora and cross-linguistic questionnaires, we make the novel empirical generalization that word order plays a crucial role in distinguishing between these two readings, irrespective of whether there is an additional difference between definite vs. bare nominals (German, Bulgarian, Macedonian) or not (the other Slavic languages). Specifically, non-conservative %Qs appear low in the structure, inside the VP, whereas conservative %Qs either appear in their canonical position, depending on their syntactic role as subject or object (German, Bulgarian), or high/VP-externally (the other Slavic languages). We propose that non-conservative %Qs are always interpreted low and combine with the predicate on a par with semantically incorporated nominals and, with intransitves, existential constructions. We argue against previous accounts that ascribe a crucial role to focus for the non-conservative reading to arise, in taking focus to merely be derivative from the requirement of non-conservative %Qs to appear low, paired with a general rule for sentential stress placement.
Links
GA20-16107S, research and development projectName: Struktury část-celek napříč jazyky
Investor: Czech Science Foundation
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