Penka & Zeijlstra on Negative Indefinites

[New at LingBuzz:]

Doris Penka & Hedde Zeijlstra. “Negative Indefinites in Dutch and German”. September 2005

This paper provides an explanation for split-scope readings in Dutch and German, where negative indefinites such as “geen X” or “kein X” (”no X”) can obtain a reading in which some element, e.g. a modal verb, intervenes between the negation and the indefinite part. The autors show that negative indefinites in Dutch and German are lexically complex elements that consist of a negative and and an indefinite part. The authors demonstrate that as a consequence of the copy theory of movement such negative indefinites yield split-scope readings. The paper concludes by arguing that split-scope readings, negative concord and licensing of negative polarity items are three different phenomena, each taking place in a different component of grammar.

The Puzzle of Alphabetical Order

As Sabine Iatridou and I are putting the finishing touches on another collaboration, I am struck yet again by the puzzle raised by the ritual incantation: “The authors appear in alphabetical order.”

It is clear what the sentence is used to convey: that the order of the authors’ names is not meant to reflect the importance of their contributions but was solely determined by the alphabetical order (F before I, in our case). But how do we manage to convey that with this sentence?

Is it that “alphabetical order” here has as its semantic content “an order determined by the order of the alphabet” rather than “an order consistent with the order of the alphabet”?

If so, we have to concede that “alphabetical order” must be ambiguous, since it is not a contradiction to say that “the authors appear in alphabetical order, but only accidentally so”.

Alternatively, we might want to tell a Gricean story. What is said by the sentence is a near triviality: anyone looking at the list of authors and a knowledge of the alphabet will realize that the order is consistent with the order of the alphabet.#[1] So, the cooperative hearer will draw the inference that more is meant: namely, that the truth of the sentence is more than an accident.

The Gricean story would actually be a natural ingredient in an ambiguity story as well, since the near triviality of the sentence under one of its putative readings would serve as an incentive to resolve the ambiguity towards the more informative reading.

Lastly, one could imagine an analysis that says that the sentence does say that the order was non-accidentally determined by the alphabet but that the source of that reading is not a lexical ambiguity but lies in the presence of a covert “generic” operator. Something like this is often appealed to when dealing with the apparent ambiguity of a sentence like “Every coin in my pocket is silver”#[2], which can be taken to convey an accidental generalization (”it just so happens that currently every coin in my pocket is silver”) or can convey a lawlike generalization (”as a matter of policy, I allow only silver coins in my pocket”). Reinterpretation of a (near) triviality as conveying a lawlike generalization happens with surface tautologies like “Boys will be boys” (but this also involves reinterpreting the predicate as referring to stereoptypical properties of boys).

I am thinking about expanding this into a squib, but would like to hear whether readers share my befuddlement and what their guesses at the appropriate analysis are.

[1]: Actually, our case is not the best example of that, because people might erroneously have thought that “von Fintel” should appear after “Iatridou” in an alphabetic order.

[2]: The example is due to Nelson Goodman.

Plagiarism Ads

Molly Diesing noticed that some of the ads that Google has been serving to this site have been ads for companies that will sell plagiarized term papers to cheaters. I have added the URLs of the relevant sites to Google’s Ad Filter. Unfortunately, Google doesn’t offer a way of filtering ads by keywords. So, continued vigilance will be required. Let me know if you see an ad that is out of place on an academic site.

By the way, the reason that there are Google ads at all on this site is to defray the computing costs (especially the hosting service) — MIT has no facilities that could host the site, so I am using a commercial vendor.

Update: Ironically, this very post seems to serve as a magnet for ads from these companies (on the individual entry page). So, I can use that as a mousetrap by just checking on what shows up here and add it to the filter.

Another Update: Here is Google’s response to an email I sent them about this issue:

Hello, Thank you for your email. Currently, we don’t offer the option to individually filter out specific ads or types of ads. The only way to filter ads from your site is by blocking all ads from that advertiser’s site. Should we offer the option to filter by type of ad in the future, we’ll be sure to let you know.

Volunteer for Philosophy Papers Blog

Brian Weatherson is looking to pass on the administration of the Online Philosophy Papers blog.

“Now that everyone in philosophy has papers online, keeping track of all the address changes, clawing through all the false positives (people who keep things like office hours, or lists of talks in their departments etc on their papers page have pages that update all the time without much interest), finding out whether something is a paper or basically a blog post to a non-blog, separating out the philosophy papers from the non-philosophy papers on sites that have both, etc takes more time than I can really spare. And I have another project that I’ll be launching soon that will take up a fair bit of time. So I suspect that I’ll basically give it all up fairly soon.”

I don’t blame him. Keeping track of research online is more of a chore than it should be. When you put a paper up on your homepage, you should also upload it to one of the central depositories, so that everyone knows there’s new work to check out. This is what happens in other disciplines that use the arXiv.org e-Print archive. And that’s what we should be doing as well.

I am one of those who hasn’t been doing that consistently, so I will try to reform myself. I suspect that putting a leaky draft on your own homepage feels like it’s less of a public exposure than uploading it to the semanticsarchive or the like. But that’s certainly illusory.

So, here’s what we should all do:

  • By all means, put anything new you have written on your own homepage (or your department’s papers page).
  • But also upload it to a central depository:
  • Subscribe to the RSS feeds for the depositories (the Semantics Archive and Philosophy Papers Online have one, and LingBuzz probably will soon) to keep tabs on what’s new.
  • Comment on new work on your blog (or your department’s blog) with links back to the depository copy (via automatic trackback at some future time, I’m sure).

Ah yes. In the mean time, until we’re all civilized citizens of the online research world, there will still be a need for the service Brian has been providing. I hope he finds someone to take over the job.

Potts Slides

Chris Potts has made available the slides from two talks he just gave in Germany:

Donkey King

Jeff King. “Context Dependent Quantifiers and Donkey Anaphora”, forthcoming in the Canadian Journal of Philosophy supplementary volume New Essays in the Philosophy of Language and Mind

Portner and Zanuttini on Nominal Exclamatives

Portner, Paul and Raffaella Zanuttini. “Nominal Exclamatives in English”. In Ellipsis and Non-Sentential Speech, edited by Robert Stainton and Ray Elugardo, Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers (Studies in Linguistics and Philosophy series), 57-67.

In this contribution we consider a type of exclamative construction in English which shows an unusual pairing between syntactic form and semantic/pragmatic function. This is the nominal exclamative, illustrated in (1):

(1) The strange things that he says!

(2) What strange things he says!

(1) is a noun phrase, and thus contrasts syntactically with (2), which is a clause. Yet the two seem to be synonymous. We will argue that the noun phrase is not embedded in an elliptical structure; rather, the phrase we see is all there is. And furthermore we will argue that (1) is not just pragmatically equivalent to (2); the two are in fact semantically equivalent as well. This raises the question, of central concern to this volume, of how a noun phrase achieves such a clause-like function.

Reminder: Homework 3 & Reading

Homework 3 is the exercise on connectives in Heim & Kratzer (page 23).

The reading for next week is chapter 2 of Heim & Kratzer.

Survey sessions: in Search of Our Semantic Superego

The third survey session will be devoted to discussing the foundational issues that most textbooks in formal semantics seem to care about. Our review of the Chomsky-Partee debate focused on one: the compositionality principle — the requirement that the meaning of an expression be determined only as a function of the meaning of its parts. What other properties will we require the semantic component of grammar to have? To find out, we proposed browsing through the introductory chapters of several textbooks on formal semantics.

The goal for tomorrow is to put together a list of methodological assumptions, theoretical constraints, theoretical desiderata, and the like, that you may have come across in your readings. We will see if any coherent picture arises. To the extent that it does, we will locate ourselves in the space of possible methodologies for building a semantics for natural languages. And in searching for methodological constraints we will face foundational issues that we will not be able to face when doing semantics in the general sessions — we will be too busy.

We are mostly interested in hearing what you have to say, so grab your notes and get ready for some fun discussion! If you are looking for inspiration, we have uploaded a handout that may help you with the readings.

Zamparelli on Qualche

[A must read for indefinite buffs. Just posted at the semanticsarchive:]

Roberto Zamparelli. “On Singular Existential Quantifiers in Italian”. Draft from November 2004. Keywords: singular quantifiers, Italian, “some”, pragmatics, scalar implicatures, “qualche”.

Sloman papers online

As readers of this blog know, Sabine and I have been championing an old paper by Aaron Sloman called “Ought and Better” in our work on anankastic conditionals. When at ESPP David Over told me about Aaron’s later career, I was happy I could set people right who suspected that Aaron was some long-forgotten ethicist by telling them about his illustrious career as a CogSci impresario. Now, Aaron has heard about the renewed interest in his work on ought and has uploaded his old papers to the web:

  1. Aaron Sloman. “How to derive better from is American Philosophical Quarterly, Vol 6, Number 1, Jan 1969, pp 43–52.
  2. Aaron Sloman. Ought and Better Mind, vol LXXIX, No 315, July 1970, pp 385–394.

SALT 16 Call for Papers

For the first time outside the USA: SALT 16 will be held March 22-24, 2006 at the University of Tokyo. The abstract deadline is November 14, 2005. All speakers will receive up to ¥100,000 (approximately US $900) as partial reimbursement for travel related expenses. Start the abstract engines, ladies and gentlemen.

Tredinnick’s Thesis on Whatever

[An exciting new work:]

Victoria Tredinnick. On the Semantics of Free Relatives with -’Ever’. PhD Thesis, University of Pennsylvania.

Dissertation Abstract:

This dissertation is about three aspects of the semantics of -ever free relatives: their modal flavor (ignorance or indifference), their quantificational force (definite or universal), and their presuppositions.

Free relatives with -ever have readings available to them that plain free relatives do not. Von Fintel (2000) argues that -ever introduces a presupposition of variation over the denotation of the free relative (a definite expression) across possible worlds. When the modal base is epistemic, variation results in the ignorance reading; when the modal base is counterfactual, variation results in the indifference reading. I adopt this analysis of the modal dimension of -ever free relatives and make a further distinction between agent indifference and external indifference.

Regarding quantificational force, it has been variously argued that -ever free relatives are definite descriptions and that they are universals. Dayal (1997) argues that -ever free relatives are definites that acquire the properties of universals when they appear in generic contexts. I argue that a version of this last position is correct: Not all -ever free relatives can display universal behavior. While indifference free relatives can behave either like definites or like universals, ignorance free relatives cannot behave like universals and always behave like definites even in generic contexts.

I argue that the ability of indifference free relatives to behave like universals is correlated with the projection behavior of their presupposition. The counterfactual presupposition that produces indifference can be accommodated locally, giving rise to agent indifference, or it can project globally, giving rise to external indifference. In contrast, the epistemic presupposition that produces ignorance can only project globally. Furthermore, ignorance free relatives that appear in generic contexts are not interpreted under the generic operator. These properties of ignorance free relatives are linked to the fact that ignorance free relatives are epistemic items.

Semantics Job Wiki

I have received only positive and encouraging feedback on my idea of hosting an exchange of information about semantics job openings. So, herewith the Semantics Job Wiki is open for business. Check it out and contribute.

Elbourne on Ellipsis

Paul Elbourne. “The Semantics of Ellipsis”. ms, May 30, 2005.

There are four phenomena that are particularly troublesome for theories of ellipsis: the existence of sloppy readings when the relevant pronouns cannot possibly be bound; an ellipsis being resolved in such a way that an ellipsis site in the antecedent is not understood in the way it was there; an ellipsis site drawing material from two or more separate antecedents; and ellipsis with no linguistic antecedent. These cases are accounted for by means of a new theory that involves copying syntactically incomplete antecedent material and an analysis of silent VPs and NPs that makes them into higher order definite descriptions that can be bound into.

Chronos Call for Papers

From LINGUIST List:

Chronos 7

International conference on tense, aspect, mood, and modality

18 - 20 September 2006

University of Antwerp (Belgium)

Chronos is a series of biannual conferences dedicated to current research on the morphology, syntax, semantics, and pragmatics of markers of tense, aspect, mood, and modality. The conferences aim to bring together researchers working from different perspectives and in different theoretical frames.

Special topic: Tense and modality

Submissions addressing the relationships between temporal and nontemporal/modal values of tenses are especially encouraged. Submissions to the conference are not restricted to the special topic. We welcome proposals relating to any area in the linguistics of tense, aspect, mood, and modality.

Abstract submissions

Presentations will be delivered in English or French. The deadline for abstract submissions is January 8, 2006. Abstracts should be sent either to the following email address as an attachment:

or to this snail mail address on a separate page:

Walter De Mulder
University of Antwerp (CST)
Department of Linguistics
Rodestraat 14
2000 Antwerp
Belgium

The email message or accompanying cover letter should specify all contact information for the author(s), including their name, affiliation, university or home address, and email address, as well as the exact title of the submission.

The abstract should be anonymous and will be subject to a blind review. It should not exceed one page, Times 11, examples and references included. Accepted formats for electronic submissions are Word, PDF (Adobe Acrobat Reader, version 6), or rich text format (RTF). Authors will be notified of acceptance or rejection of their proposal by February 28, 2006. A maximum of one individual and one co-authored paper is considered per author.

A second call for papers will provide more details about the organization of the conference. It will be distributed in late October.

For all additional information, please contact

Semantics Jobs Rumor Mill?

I found out the other day that in physics, it is common practice for people on the academic job market to publicly share information about ongoing job searches. This brings knowledge in the open that otherwise only travels in insider circles, among those that are “in the know” (and have the gene for gossiping). The original such site in physics appears to be the Theoretical Particle Physics Jobs Rumor Mill. Here are some passages (written in 2002, seven years after its inception) from the history page on that site:

One does not normally associate the high-brow world of particle physics with rumors and gossip-mongering, but the tight academic job market has lead to several web sites that provide rumors of job openings, short lists, offers, and actual hirings. These web sites have adopted the nickname of “rumor mills” and have spread from the original site that focused on particle physics in the U.S and Canada to cover the U.K., Austria, Germany, Greece, New Zealand, Portugal, and Switzerland; there are also sites that deal with nuclear theory and astrophysics. At the start of the academic year, advertisements appear for new faculty positions, and as the searches progress hopeful applicants can monitor the progress of each search by seeing when short lists are compiled and eventually when offers are made and accepted or declined.

The initial reaction from post-docs was generally one of delight, while the reaction of the tenured crowd leaned to the more hostile. Senior scientists tended to have reactions based on the tired refrain of “that’s not how it was when I was young,” followed by comparisons to less-than-reputable journalists and comments like “Aren’t you afraid of being sued?” (Such hostility kept me from openly associating my name with the project until I got my own permanent position.) Now seven years later, rather than being part of a rebellious counter-culture, the rumor mill has become part of the establishment. Physics departments often send job advertisements directly to the rumor mill, and some even send in their short lists in order to avoid any misunderstandings.

I am considering setting up a site to track current developments in the job market for semantics. We would have the job announcements (from LINGUIST List) and then let anyone who has information (or wants to discuss a particular job, or wants to ask a question about a job) add their insights to the page for that job. A wiki might be the best way to set this up. Of course, the site would have to be monitored for spam and incivility.

What do people think?

RSS via Email

This is a tip for those who would like to get notified of updates to this website or others that offer RSS feeds but would prefer not to use an extra piece of equipment (a RSS newsreader) for this. There is a free (donation-ware) service called RssFwd.com that will scan RSS feeds for you and send you updates via email. I have added subscription links for email subscriptions to this blog, to geek notes, and to my personal pages. Also, you could use this link to subscribe to updates in the semantics archive.

PS. There is another service that does the same thing: RMail, but after trying it out, I decided their emails were a bit more cluttered than the ones from RssFwd.

New Homepage, New Resource Page

Just before the semester starts, I have re-organized my personal webpages a bit (at the same time, I was also cleaning my office and getting ready to co-teach our graduate introduction to semantics with Luis Alonso-Ovalle).

My homepage is now at and the list of semantics resources is now at . Both pages now have RSS feeds that you can subscribe to for updates. The bibliographic entries on my homepage allow comments and trackbacks, if you are moved to leave a comment on any of my work.

This would be a good time to look over the listing of links on the resource page and let me know if you notice any omissions or outdated information. I would appreciate a heads-up. I will be adding some links in the weeks to come, as I find time.

Syllabus

The final syllabus for the course is now available.