Affiliation:
1. Department of Linguistics, University of California, Berkeley, 1203 Dwinelle Hall #2650, Berkeley, CA 94720-2650,
Abstract
While it lacks a definite article, Mandarin makes a principled distinction between unique and anaphoric definites: unique definites are realized with a bare noun, and anaphoric definites are realized with a demonstrative, except in subject position. The following proposals account for these facts: (a) bare nouns achieve definite interpretations via a last-resort type-shifting operator ι, which has a unique definite meaning; (b) demonstratives can occur as anaphoric definites because they have a semantic argument beyond their nominal restriction that can be filled by an index; and (c) bare nominal subjects are topics. A principle called Index! requires that indexical expressions be used whenever possible. Mandarin is contrasted with Cantonese, which, like English, is shown to have access to an ambiguous definite article.
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Reference105 articles.
1. Abney, Steven. 1987. The noun phrase in its sentential aspect. Doctoral dissertation, MIT, Cambridge, MA.
2. A familiar definite article in Akan
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