Neg-words: what they are and what they are not and what follows from this.
Helmut Weiß
February 2025
 

This paper is concerned with neg-words that are usually defined by their occurrence in NC constructions. The common definition of neg-words has several weaknesses: for example, it does not allow to define NC in a non-circular way or it cannot explain why DN is possible in many NC languages. Therefore, an alternative definition is proposed in this paper: Neg-words are indefinite pronouns (or adverbs) that contain a negative morpheme, or indefinite pronouns (or adverbs) that have replaced such an indefinite pronoun (or adverb). Defining neg-words in this way has several advantages: it allows a non-circular and precise definition of NC, it can also explain why DN is also possible in NC languages (therefore, the term negative quantifier can be dispensed with), and it allows an alternaKve typological classification of NC and non-NC languages to the usual one in which NC and DN languages are contrasted. According to the view expressed here, non-NC languages are languages without neg-words (as defined here) and they cover a group of languages to which 80% to 90% of all languages belong. In addiKon, I analyze neg-words as Heimian indefinites with an interpretable neg-feature. This explains the wide range of uses of neg-words from weak indefinites (the default case) to negated existenKal quanKfiers to universal quanKfiers that scope over negaKon.
Format: [ pdf ]
Reference: lingbuzz/008788
(please use that when you cite this article)
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keywords: neg-words, nci, negative quantifier, nc, dn, *nall, semantics, syntax
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