Abstract
Disjunction with two scalar items, such assome or all of the books, has been regarded as evidence for the grammatical theory of scalar implicatures (e.g., Chierchia et al.,2012). Hurford's Constraint (Hurford,1974) provides that disjuncts are banned from having an entailing relation, and to make such a disjunction comply with Hurford's Constraint, the meaning ofsomemust be locally strengthened. Interestingly, however, the order of disjoined scalar items is not free, as noted by Singh (2008). The order in which a weaker scalar item comes first followed by its stronger scalar mate is better than the other order. I present an analysis of this ordering restriction based on the novel observation that the restriction is not only found in disjunction but in contrastive environments in general. I propose that contrasting a linguistic expression requires a “contrast antecedent,” which must elicit a set of mutually exclusive alternatives that includes the meaning of the contrasted expression. It will be demonstrated how the mutual exclusivity requirement presents a principled explanation for the ordering asymmetry as well as Hurford's Constraint itself, which indicates that the root of the constraint is not in disjunction but in contrastiveness. One of the indispensable ingredients in the proposal is the grammatical/conventional generation of scalar implicatures, as the strengthened meaning must be the basis of alternatives. The paper also provides a speculative analysis ofonly, in which I suggest that the process of exhaustification in the grammatical theory of scalar implicatures should not be characterized as the implicitonly, the semantic contributions of which are more different than commonly assumed.
Highlights
Specialty section: This article was submitted to Language Sciences, a section of the journal Frontiers in Communication
It will be demonstrated how the mutual exclusivity requirement presents a principled explanation for the ordering asymmetry as well as Hurford’s Constraint itself, which indicates that the root of the constraint is not in disjunction but in contrastiveness
The paper provides a speculative analysis of only, in which I suggest that the process of exhaustification in the grammatical theory of scalar implicatures should not be characterized as the implicit only, the semantic contributions of which are more different than commonly assumed
Summary
Hurford (1974) noted that there is a felicity constraint that bans entailing disjuncts, as exemplified in (1). Living in Los Angeles entails living in California, so they cannot be placed side by side in disjunction. The relations in (3cd) may be a little less straightforward, but one can still argue that entailment is involved there as well These sentences do not show the expected effects of Hurford’s constraint violations. To make the disjunctions in (3) comply with Hurford’s Constraint, it is necessary to strengthen the meaning of the scalar expressions that are in the entailed propositions, as indicated in (4). The addition of the negated proposition takes place at the level in which OALT appears It appears that what OALT does is not too far from the semantic effect of the adverb only, and OALT is often described as the silent version of it.Chierchia et al (2012) suggest that the silent version of only is independently needed to derive exhaustive answers to questions. C. [[OALT [Anna ate some (of the cookies)] or [(she ate) all of the cookies]] ≈ Anna ate only some of the cookies or all of the cookies
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