Abstract
Abstract
This paper studies the discourse-embedding of specificational clauses, in contrast with predicative ones. Specificational
clauses – which express a variable – value relation – are assumed to have a ‘fixed’ information structure. This follows from the widespread
definition of information structure in terms of a presupposition – focus contrast, which is often conflated with the variable – value
contrast, on the one hand, and with a given – new contrast, on the other. Against these conflations, this study demonstrates that the
specification is a separate layer of meaning, which not only shows variation in terms of focus-marking (Van Praet and O’Grady 2018), but also in terms of its embedding in specific contexts of use. These findings urge us to revisit not
only the basis for distinguishing specificational clauses from predicative ones, but also to separate out the different layers of coded and
pragmatic meaning that have been conflated under the header of ‘information structure’.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Philosophy,Language and Linguistics