The typology of cumulativity


Sentences containing plural expressions can be true in a number of situations: The sentence `Two boys fed two cats', for instance, is true if boy 1 and boy 2 each fed two cats -- but also if boy 1 fed only cat 1 and boy 2 fed only cat 2. The so-called `truth conditions' of this sentence thus differ from those of the sentence `Every boy fed two cats', which is false in the latter situation (even if there are only two boys). This project wants to find out how the truth-conditions of plural sentences come about.

But why would this be an interesting question? Our general aim, after all, is to understand the human `language faculty' (i.e.: Why can we understand sentences of our native languages even if we have never come across them before?) -- and thus we also have to investigate which objects can act as meanings for the expressions of human languages (i.e.: What exactly is the meaning of `every' or `two?') and which mechanism do we use to put together the meanings of smaller parts (e.g., `two, cats') to get to the meanings of bigger parts (e.g., {\it two cats}). Plural sentences are particularly relevant to this larger enterprise as our theory of meaning does not capture them sufficently so far. What seems to happen intuitively in our plural sentence above is that we `sum up' boys and cats that were fed by these boys in parallel. Yet, it is unclear how exactly this `summing-up' mechanism works and what exacly we are `summing up' -- for instance, do we merely want to `sum up' cats or also properties of cat-feeding? Is the phenomenon limited to nominal plural expressions like `two cats'? Or does it extend to other expressions where we intuitively `sum up' different kinds of `objects' (e.g., in the case of `dance and sing')? And how do the meanings of expressions that permit such a `summing up' differ from those that -- at least at first sight -- don't (like `every boy')?

Semantic theory (which deals with the meaning of natural language) offers different hypotheses in this respect, which, however, cannot easily be distinguished on the basis of an individual language like English -- one of the reasons being that there is always the possibility that a language will contain elements that are not overtly `realized'. Yet the different hypotheses diverge in their predictions concerning cross-linguistic patterns (for instance: If we made the assumption that English contains a `silent' element that makes a meaning contribution in plural sentences, we would expect that at least some languages realized this element overtly). The project will therefore investigate the predictions of the different hypotheses cross-linguistically, using the publicly accessible, recently developed Terraling database: In this database, researchers can pose questions for which other linguists will provide data from their respective native languages.

Principal investigators
Schmitt, Viola Dr. (Details) (General and Germanistic Linguistics: Semantics and Pragmatics)

Participating organisational units of HU Berlin

Financer
Sonstige internationale öffentliche Mittelgeber

Duration of project
Start date: 10/2020
End date: 01/2024

Research Areas
Linguistics

Research Areas
Semantik

Last updated on 2022-19-11 at 04:05