Abstract

Different polar question forms (e.g., Do you / Do you not / Don’t you / Really? Do you... have a car?) are not equally appropriate in all situations. The present experiments investigate which combinations of original speaker belief and contextual evidence influence the choice of question type in English and German. Our results show that both kinds of bias interact: in both languages, positive polar questions are typically selected when there is no original speaker belief and positive or non-informative contextual evidence; low negation questions (Do you not...?) are most frequently chosen when no original belief meets negative contextual evidence; high negation questions (Don’t you...?) are prompted when positive original speaker belief is followed by negative or non-informative contextual evidence; positive questions with really are produced most frequently when a negative original bias is combined with positive contextual evidence. In string-identical forms, there are prosodic differences across crucial conditions.

Highlights

  • A polar question (PQ) is a question that expects only two possible answers: an ­affirmative answer or a negative one (Karttunen 1977; Groenendijk & Stokhof 1984; see Krifka 2013; Roelofsen & Farkas 2015)

  • 1.4 Research questions, hypotheses and predictions The present paper addresses two main questions currently under debate in the literature: (RQ1) Which pragmatic bias(es) is the surface form of a polar question sensitive to? More concretely, do the use-conditions of polar question forms depend on: (Hyp 1) only evidence bias (Hyp 2) only original bias, or (Hyp 3) a combination of original bias and evidence bias?

  • What we find is heterogeneity, showing that the selection of PQ form depends on a combination of both kinds of bias

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Summary

Introduction

A polar question (PQ) is a question that expects only two possible answers: an ­affirmative answer or a negative one (Karttunen 1977; Groenendijk & Stokhof 1984; see Krifka 2013; Roelofsen & Farkas 2015). Even if we just want an affirmative or negative answer, there are different ways to phrase the question. Two alternative realizations are given, with the adverb really and with focus on the finite verb, which have been treated in a parallel way (Romero & Han 2004). (3) Isn’t there a good restaurant nearby?. Is there really a good restaurant nearby?. B. [Is]Focus there a good restaurant nearby?

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