Abstract
Abstract
The telicity behavior of degree achievements has been a puzzling problem to many linguists. The most successful and currently standard theory (Kennedy & Levin 2008) treats them as degree expressions lexicalizing different types of scales, which in turn influence the resulting evaluative or non-evaluative interpretation. While it may account for English, this theory does not hold up cross-linguistically. We challenge the scalar theory with new Slavic data and show that verbal prefixes influence the (non-)evaluative interpretation of degree achievements more than their underlying scales do. This proposal is formalised as an addition of two type shifters, morphosyntactically realised as prefixes, which, in result, have an evaluative/non-evaluative effect on the given degree achievement.
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics,Cultural Studies
Reference64 articles.
1. Mandarin transitive comparatives and the grammar of measurement;Grano;Journal of East Asian Linguistics,2012
2. There and back again: A semantic analysis;Beck;Journal of Semantics,2005
3. On formal identity of Russian prefixes and prepositions;Matushansky;MIT Working Papers in Linguistics,2002
4. The different readings of wieder ‘again’: A structural account;von Stechow;Journal of Semantics,1996
5. Word Meaning and Montague Grammar