Speaker presupposition and Mandarin Chinese sentence-final -le: A unified analysis of the "change of state" and the "contrary to expectation" reading

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    Abstract

    This paper addresses the connection between the "change of state" and the "contrary to expectation" interpretations through a study of Mandarin sentence-final particle -le (sentential -le), which along with English already and German schon are associated with these two interpretations. Making use of the notion of speaker presupposition and common ground (Stalnaker 1998, 1999, 2002), I propose an analysis of sentential -le whereby the "change of state" interpretation is associated with a change expressed by propositions within a common ground, while the "contrary to expectation" interpretation is associated with a change expressed by propositions across common grounds. Contrary to what is sometimes assumed, both the "change of state" and the "contrary to expectation" interpretations involve changes across a temporal domain. The proposal is supported by a restriction in the occurrence of sentential -le with downward-entailing quantifiers. The analysis supports Löbner's (1989) insight that already/schon is associated with a presupposition about a prior "negative state", and clarifies how the "change of state" associated with sentential -le is different from the one entailed by the occurrence of a telic situation.

    Original languageEnglish (US)
    Pages (from-to)623-657
    Number of pages35
    JournalNatural Language and Linguistic Theory
    Volume27
    Issue number3
    DOIs
    StatePublished - Sep 2009

    Keywords

    • Aspect
    • Change of state
    • Common ground
    • Contrary to expectation
    • Mandarin Chinese
    • Presupposition
    • Sentence-final -le

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