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Context-Dependence in the Analysis of Linguistic Meaning

BuchGebunden
568 Seiten
Englisch
Brillerschienen am15.09.2002
This collection of papers addresses context-dependence and methods for dealing with it. The book also records comments to the papers and the authors' replies to the comments. In this way, the contributions themselves are contextually dependent. It represents an inquiry into the activities on the semantics side of the pragmatics boundary.mehr

Produkt

KlappentextThis collection of papers addresses context-dependence and methods for dealing with it. The book also records comments to the papers and the authors' replies to the comments. In this way, the contributions themselves are contextually dependent. It represents an inquiry into the activities on the semantics side of the pragmatics boundary.
Details
ISBN/GTIN978-0-08-043694-4
ProduktartBuch
EinbandartGebunden
Verlag
Erscheinungsjahr2002
Erscheinungsdatum15.09.2002
Reihen-Nr.11
Seiten568 Seiten
SpracheEnglisch
MasseBreite 225 mm, Höhe 157 mm, Dicke 27 mm
Gewicht984 g
Artikel-Nr.26926323

Inhalt/Kritik

Inhaltsverzeichnis
I. PapersEmpty-domain Effects for Presuppositional and Non-presuppositional Determiners, D. Abush, M. RoothFrom Discourse Macro-Structure to Micro-Structure and Back Again: Discourse Semantics and the Focus/Background Distinction, N. AsherFixing the Reference Situations: German Temporal Conjunctions, R. BauerleAccommodating Topics, D. BeaverOn Context and Identity, P. DekkerAre Context Change Potentials Functions?, T. FernandoA Minimal Theory of Adverbial Quantification, Kai von FintelFocus and the Boundaries of the Language System, E. HajicovaFocus and/or Context: A Second Look at Second Occurrence Expressions, M. KrifkaTopic, Focus, and Some Aspects of the Semantics of Discourse, P. KubonWhy not Kim Basinger? On the Art des Gegebenseins of a Contextually Given Set, A. MerinOrder-Independence and Underspecification, R. MuskensDynamic Semantics with Choice Functions, J. Peregrin, K. von HeusingerTopics and the Conceptual Interface, T. ReinhartPresuppositions of Existence and of Uniqueness, and Allegation, P. SgallTertiumne Datur? Possessive Pronouns and the Bipartition of the Lexicon, T.E. ZimmermannII. CommentsComments on Tim Fernando: Mathematical Treatments of Contexts, N. AsherComments on Manfred Krifka: Can Pragmatic Accounts Explain Pseudo-Secondary Effects of Focus?, N. AsherComments on Asher and Krifka: Acoustic Correlates of Second Occurrence Focus: Toward and Experimental Investigation, C. BartelsComments on Beavers and von Fintels Theories of Presuppostition Accommodation, S. BermanComments on Zimmermann: Tertium Evitari Non Potest: On Ede Zimmermanns Bipartition of the Lexicon, M. BierwischCases, Adverbs, Situations and Events, P. DekkerComments on Beaver: Presupposition Accomodation and Quantifier Domains, Kai von FintelComments on Reinhart: The Syntactic Roots of Discourse Cohesion, Kai von FintelComments on von Fintel, E HajicovaRemarks on Focus Sensitive Particles (to Krifkas and von Fintels Papers), E. Hajicova, Petr SgallRemarks on DRT and TFA, E. Hajicova, P. SgallComments on Kaplans Demonstratives and Zimmermanns Tertiumne Datur? Possessive Pronouns and the Bipartition of the Lexicon, H. Kamp, A. RobetadeutcherComments on Dekker, J. PeregrinComments on Krifka, J. PeregrinA Comment on Reinhard Muskens Paper: Order Independence and Underspecification, M. PinkalComments on Krifkas Paper, M. RoothTopichood and the Stage/Individual Distinction, H. de SwartNegation: Scope and Anaphora, H. de SwartTopic, Focus, and Presupposition, H. de SwartRemarks on the Epistemic Role of Discourse Referents, T.E. ZimmermannIII. Authors RepliesMinimal Replies to: Dekker, Hajicova & Sgall, Berman and De Swart, K. von FintelReplies to: Rooth, Bartels, Asher and Peregrin, M. KrifkaReplies to: Bierwisch, Kamp & Robetadeutscher and Muskens, T.E. Zimmermannmehr

Autor

Paul Portner is Associate Professor of Linguistics and Acting Director of the Interdisciplinary Program in Cognitive Science at Georgetown University. He is the author of numerous articles on topics such as mood and modality, tense and aspect, and the syntax/semantics interface.
Barbara H. Partee is Distinguished University Professor of Linguistics and Philosophy at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst and is the author of several landmark essays in formal semantics. She has written and edited numerous books, including Mathematical Methods in Linguistics (with Alice ter Meulen and Robert Wall, 1990), Montague Grammar (edited, 1976), and Quantification in Natural Languages (edited, with Emmon Bach, Eloise Jelinek, and Angelika Kratzer, 1995).