Abstract

Scalar inferences are ubiquitous in human reasoning. Correspondingly, language has many means of expressing and encoding them. One of these means is the focus particle even, which utilizes scalar inferences to signal the pragmatic status of asserted content as noteworthy. The vehicles that even employs to signal noteworthiness are scalar likelihood inferences. A peculiarity of these inferences is that they are presuppositional in nature (not-at-issue) and yet, they are responsive to the polarity of the sentence expressing the proposition whose likelihood is signaled. This property raises intricate questions about what learners might expect scalar operators of this sort to look like (initial hypothesis space) as well as what type of evidence and learning strategies they have access to as they figure out the specific properties of even in adult English. This paper presents a detailed study of this development, combining data from a series of comprehension experiments and corpus studies. We find that children are sensitive to the basic scalar nature of even much earlier than previous literature has claimed. We additionally find, however, that children sometimes exhibit non-adult-like responses to even sentences, which we argue provide insight into their developing grammar. On this view, the child grammar offers a larger option space for even than the adult grammar. Becoming adult-like, in turn, involves eliminating some of these options, namely those that are underutilized in production due to their limited conversational value.

Highlights

  • This paper investigates the status of scalar inferences in child grammar through an acquisition study of the scalar focus particle even

  • We propose to resolve this puzzle by assuming that it is the comprehension data that faithfully reflect the child grammar of even, which is non-adultlike in that it provides a larger space of options for even than the adult grammar

  • Note that because HPD intervals are chosen by density of the posterior distribution, they will not center around the mean. 14All code used for the analyses in this paper can be found here: https://github. com/MITLanguageAcquisitionLab/even. 15Though our experimental design included filler items for the purpose of potentially excluding inattentive participants, a problem with one of them prevented us from using these filler items as grounds for excluding subjects in our analysis of Experiment 1

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Summary

Introduction

This paper investigates the status of scalar inferences in child grammar through an acquisition study of the scalar focus particle even. The meaning conveyed in (1) and (2) consists of three components: the asserted content, which is just the ordinary meaning of the sentence without even (i.e., the meaning of prejacent), and two Acquisition of Even invited inferences—scalar and additive in nature—which do not have the status of at-issue content. Rather they exhibit signature properties of presuppositions (or conventional implicatures), which persist even when the presupposition trigger occurs in the scope of entailment-canceling operators. This can be readily seen when transforming these sentences into questions, (3) and (4), which still give rise to the same invited inferences

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