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  1. Deletion, Deaccenting, and Presupposition.Christopher Damian Tancredi - 1992 - Dissertation, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    In this dissertation, I examine the effects of deaccenting--the removal of phonological accent from a constituent--on interpretation. In general, deaccenting of an element is possible only if that element is salient in the discourse context. Salience alone, however, is not a sufficient condition for deaccenting. ;I propose that deaccenting plays a role in identifying the focus-related topic of a sentence, where it is a necessary condition for a sentence to be felicitous in a given context that the focus-related topic of (...)
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  • Sluicing and logical form.Sandra Chung, William A. Ladusaw & James McCloskey - 1995 - Natural Language Semantics 3 (3):239-282.
    This paper presents a novel analysis of Sluicing, an ellipsis construction first described by Ross (1969) and illustrated by the bracketed portion ofI want to do something, but I'm just not sure [what _]. Starting from the assumption that a sluice consists of a displaced Wh-constituent and an empty IP, we show how simple and general LF operations fill out the empty IP and thereby provide it with an interpretable Logical Form. The LF operations we appeal to rely on the (...)
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  • Danny Fox, Economy and Semantic Interpretation, Linguistic Inquiry Monographs 35. MIT Press. [REVIEW]Danny Fox - 2002 - Linguistics and Philosophy 25 (2):233-259.
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  • Givenness, avoidf and other constraints on the placement of accent.Roger Schwarzschild - 1999 - Natural Language Semantics 7 (2):141-177.
    This paper strives to characterize the relation between accent placement and discourse in terms of independent constraints operating at the interface between syntax and interpretation. The Givenness Constraint requires un-F-marked constituents to be given. Key here is our definition of givenness, which synthesizes insights from the literature on the semantics of focus with older views on information structure. AvoidF requires speakers to economize on F-marking. A third constraint requires a subset of F-markers to dominate accents.The characteristic prominence patterns of "novelty (...)
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  • Scope or Pseudo scope? Are there Wide-Scope Indefinites?A. Kratzer - 1998 - In ΒΈ Iterothstein2001. Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 163-196.
    The paper investigates the scope properties of indefinites.
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