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E-raamat: Presupposition and Discourse Functions of the Japanese Particle Mo [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

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First Published in 2002. This volume is part of the 'Outstanding Dissertations in Linguistics' series. This study focuses on the Japanese particle mo. The particle is probably best described as roughly equivalent to the English too or also, although the difference between the Japanese particle and the English counterparts will be soon revealed as an important part of this study. This study has two goals, which are related to one another. The first goal is to prescribe a monosemous account for what is presupposed by the usage of mo by investigating its constraints on the context. The second goal is to develop a model in which the discourse-level contribution of a linguistic form is explained by its instruction on the hearer's processing the sentence at the propositional level.
Acknowledgements xi
Abbreviations xiii
Introduction
3(8)
Introduction
3(2)
Issues
5(2)
Approach
7(2)
Analysis of Contextual Constraints
7(1)
Analysis of Discourse Functions
7(2)
Data
9(1)
Overview of this study
9(2)
The Background of mo
11(16)
Introduction
11(1)
Previous Works on mo
11(4)
Description by Japanese Traditional Grammar
11(2)
Other Works on mo
13(2)
Syntactic Structures
15(4)
Repeated Usage of ma
19(1)
Scope and Partner of mo
20(4)
Even-like Usages of mo
24(3)
The Mo-Presupposition
27(40)
Introduction
27(3)
Presupposition and Form: Cases of too/either and also
30(3)
Preliminary Analysis of the Mo-presupposition
33(8)
Antecedent Propositions
33(5)
Contextual Entailment
38(3)
Bridge Property
41(20)
Bridge Entailment and the Context: Intuitive Analysis
42(5)
Contextual Relevance of the Bridge Entailment
47(1)
Grice's Account of Relevance
48(1)
Sperber and Wilson's Notion of Contextual Effect
49(5)
Evaluation of the Notion of Contextual Effect
54(2)
Notion of Contextual Relevance
56(1)
Contextual Relevance of the Bridge Entailment as a Constraint
57(4)
Relation between Host Proposition and Antecedent Proposition
61(1)
Syntactic Marking of the Partner of mo
62(3)
Summary
65(2)
Discourse Meaning of mo
67(40)
Introduction
67(4)
Discourse Interpretation Instruction
71(30)
Notion of Discourse Interpretation Instruction
71(4)
Entailment-Effect Instruction
75(5)
Antecedent-Effect Instruction
80(1)
Parallel Effect
81(2)
Juxtaposition Effect
83(5)
Strengthening Effect
88(3)
Non-Backwards-Contradiction Instruction
91(1)
Non-Backwards-Contradiction
91(5)
The function of ga
96(2)
The function of wa
98(3)
Contextual Relevance vs. Information Load
101(3)
Summary
104(3)
Mo-Presupposition and Contextual Satisfaction
107(36)
Introduction
107(1)
Presupposition and Contextual Satisfaction
108(1)
Information Status of the Mo-Antecedent
109(4)
Usages of mo and Information Status of the Mo-Antecedent
113(26)
Introduction
113(2)
Correspondence Usage of mo
115(1)
In-Context Mo-Antecedent
115(4)
Delin's Inferrable Antecedent Proposition
119(4)
Evaluation of Inferable Status
123(3)
Accommodation Usage of mo
126(1)
Notion of Accommodation for Presupposition
126(1)
Recall Usage of mo
127(5)
Implicature Usage of mo
132(5)
Cooperative Principle in Accommodation Usage
137(2)
Validity of Information Categories of the Mo-Antecedent
139(2)
Summary
141(2)
The Mo-Presupposition and Correlational Expectation
143(60)
Introduction
143(1)
Even-like Usage of mo
144(31)
Introduction
144(1)
Notion of Scalar Model
145(3)
Implicature Usage of mo and the Scalar Model
148(3)
Analysis of even-like Usage of mo
151(1)
Inferred Antecedent Proposition
151(3)
Role of the Intended Discourse Interpretation
154(2)
Correlational Expectation
156(1)
Notion of Correlational Expectation
156(2)
Contravention of Pre-Existing Correlational Expectation
158(5)
Role of Cooperative Principle in Identifying the Inferred Antecedent Proposition
163(2)
Conservation of Relative Correlational Expectation
165(2)
One-dimensional Contravention of Pre-Existing Correlational Expectation
167(6)
Summary: even-like Usage
173(2)
Concessive Usages
175(28)
Introduction
175(1)
Concessive Conjunction Usages
176(1)
Introduction
176(2)
Analysis of Concessive Conjunction Usage of mo
178(3)
Conversational Force Against Clausal Implicature
181(2)
Unexpectedness of the Host Proposition
183(3)
Concessive Conjunction with One-dimensional Contravention of Expectation
186(2)
Summary: Concessive Conjunction Usages
188(1)
Concessive Conditional Usages
189(1)
Introduction
189(2)
Analysis of Concessive Conditional Usage of mo
191(3)
Concessive Conditional with One-dimensional Contravention of Expectation
194(2)
Fujii's Work
196(4)
Universal Concessive Usages
200(3)
Conclusion
203(4)
Review of Findings
203(1)
Implications for Further Research
204(3)
Appendix 207(2)
References 209(8)
Index 217
Sachiko Shudo. Edited by Laurence Horn Yale University