Affiliation:
1. University of Helsinki
Abstract
Abstract
One cross-linguistically recurrent asymmetry between affirmation and negation is the neutralization of
tense-aspect distinctions in negatives. A functional explanation proposed for this is that in their typical discourse context
negatives have less need for temporal specification than affirmatives and in some languages this discourse preference is reflected
as fewer tense-aspect distinctions in grammar. To examine whether such a discourse preference exists, we compare the use of
temporal adverbials in affirmatives and negatives in English, Finnish and Korean corpus data. The results provide qualified
support for the hypothesized discourse preference: in English and Korean, affirmatives are likelier to have temporal adverbials
than negatives, but Finnish shows no statistically significant difference. In English and Finnish, affirmatives are likelier than
negatives to contain adjuncts indicating temporal position. Verb semantics is found to interact with temporal specifications. The
study also uncovers further differences between affirmatives and negatives in the use of adverbials.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company