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Draft:Question semantics

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Question semantics is the linguistic study of the meaning of questions and answers. Questions are a major area of research in the syntax-semantics interface.[1]

  • Play as important of a role in semantics as they do in syntax.
  • what else should go in this paragraph?

Overview

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Questions are a major topic of research in formal semantics because they do not fit with the classic view of denotations as truth conditions.[2] An influential approach developed by Charles Hamblin[3] and Lauri Karttunen[4] defines the meaning of a question as the set of possible answers to that question.


What is a question?

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Dayal .... speech act:[5]

Speech Act of Questioning―Speaker S questions Hearer H about proposition if and only if:
  1. S does not know whether is true or false
  2. S wants to know whether is true or false
  3. S believes H knows the answer of .

Types of questions and answers

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Polar questions

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A polar question (or yes-or-no question) is a question that asks whether a given proposition is true. For instance, the following English example can be answered with "yes" or "no", indicating whether or not Igor wrote a poem[6]

  1. Did Igor write a POEM?
    a. Yes (Igor wrote a poem)
    b. No (Igor did not write a poem)
    i. No, Igor wrote a book.
  2. Did Igor WRITE a poem?
    a. Yes (Igor wrote a poem)
    b. No (Igor did not write a poem)
    i. No, Igor read a poem.
  3. Did IGOR write a poem?
    a. Yes (Igor wrote a poem)
    b. No (Igor did not write a poem)
    i. No, John wrote a poem.

Alternative questions

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An alternative question is a question that asks which of several possibilities is true. For instance, the following English example can be answered with "a poem", "a book", but not with "yes" or "no". In this data sentence, the symbols "↑" and "↓" mark a rising and falling intonation contours respectively.[7][8]

  1. Did Igor write a POEM↑ or a BOOK↓? (alternative question)

Alternative questions are generally constructed using disjunction. However, additional ingredients such as focus, intonation, and particles are often necessary to distinguish them from other kinds of questions.

  1. Did Igor write [a POEM or a BOOK]↑? (polar question)

Wh-questions

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Questions which include wh words- such as "who", "what", "where", "whether" and "if"- at the beginning of the clause are called wh-questions. "Whether" and "if" only appear in indirect questions, and do not appear alongside other interrogative words such as "who" or "where". Questions may include multiple wh-words as shown in the English example below[9]

  1. Who is going where?

Conditional questions

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Conditional questions are questions embedded in the consequent of a conditional. Conditional questions can be indicative or counterfactual as shown by the English examples below.[10]

  1. If Rebecca paints her car, what colour will she paint it?
  2. If Rebecca had painted her car, what colour would she have painted it?

Embedded questions

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Questions can be embedded under propositional attitudes, speech reports, and other embedding predicates.[11]

  1. Maria knows whether Joel is coming to the party.
  2. Maria knows whether Joel or Lisa is coming to the party.
  3. Maria knows who is coming to the party.
  4. Maria asked Martin where one can buy an Italian newspaper in Amsterdam.
  5. Maria told Martin where one can buy an Italian newspaper in Amsterdam.

Rhetorical questions

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A rhetorical question is a persuasive device where a question is posed that expects no answer[12]. Semantically, they do not differ from ordinary questions, and are instead differentiated based on context. The same question can be rhetorical or ordinary depending on context, however speakers intuit rhetorical questions as having semantic equivalence to a declarative statement[13].

Rhetorical questions can be marked by the preceding phrase "after all", a following "yet"-clause or by a Negative Polarity Item. Ordinary questions can be marked by the phrases "I’m really curious" or "I really don't know"[13].

Approaches

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Hamblin semantics

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Alternative semantics is a framework in which expressions denote alternative sets, understood as sets of objects of the same semantic type. In the original version of the proposal, developed by Charles Leonard Hamblin in 1973, a question denotes the set of its possible answers. Thus, if and are propositions, then is the denotation of the question whether or is true. In a notable modification proposed by Lauri Karttunen, this idea was revised so that a question denotes the set of its true answers at the world of evaluation.[14]

Inquisitive semantics

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Inquisitive semantics is a framework for question semantics which follows Hamblin in treating questions denotations as sets of propositions. However, it departs from Hamblin semantics in two fundamental ways. First, it is more restrictive in that it requires that denotations be nonempty and downward closed. For example, where Hamblin semantics would posit a denotation containing only the two propositions and , inquisitive semantics would posit a denotation containing those propositions and all of their subsets. Second, inquisitive semantics attributes denotations of this sort to all expressions, not just question-denoting ones. For example, where Hamblin semantics would follow traditional semantics in assigning a declarative clause the denotation , inquisitive semantics would assign it the set containing and all of its subsets.

Partition semantics

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History

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Charles Hamblin[3]


See also

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Notes

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References

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  1. ^ Dayal 2017, p. 1.
  2. ^ Dayal 2016.
  3. ^ a b Hamblin 1973.
  4. ^ Karttunen 1977.
  5. ^ Dayal 2017, p. 4.
  6. ^ Ciardelli, Groenendijk & Roelofsen 2019.
  7. ^ "Alternative question". LinguaLinks Library Glossary of Linguistic Terms. SIL. 2003.
  8. ^ Ciardelli, Groenendijk & Roelofsen 2019; Biezma & Rawlins 2015.
  9. ^ Kuno, Susumu; Robinson, Jane J. (1972). "Multiple Wh Questions". Linguistic Inquiry. 3 (4): 463–487. ISSN 0024-3892.
  10. ^ Ciardelli, Groenendijk & Roelofsen 2019; Isaacs & Rawlins 2008; Vilassaratou 2000.
  11. ^ Ciardelli, Groenendijk & Roelofsen 2019; Huddleston & Pullum 2002; Theiler, Roelofsen & Aloni 2018.
  12. ^ Frank, Jane (1990-10-01). "You call that a rhetorical question?: Forms and functions of rhetorical questions in conversation". Journal of Pragmatics. 14 (5): 723–738. doi:10.1016/0378-2166(90)90003-V. ISSN 0378-2166.
  13. ^ a b Caponigro, Ivano; Sprouse, Jon (2007). "Rhetorical questions as questions". Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung. 11: 121–133. doi:10.18148/sub/2007.v11i0.635. ISSN 2629-6055.
  14. ^ Cross & Roelofsen.

Bibliography

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  • Biezma, María; Rawlins, Kyle (2015). "Alternative Questions". Language and Linguistics Compass. 9 (11): 450–468. doi:10.1111/lnc3.12161. S2CID 30394192.
  • Chierchia, Gennaro (1993). "Questions with quantifiers". Natural Language Semantics. 1 (2): 181–234. doi:10.1007/BF00372562. S2CID 121524098.
  • Ciardelli, Ivano; Groenendijk, Jeroen; Roelofsen, Floris (2019). Inquisitive Semantics (PDF). Oxford University Press. Chapter 5.1. ISBN 9780198814788.
  • Cross, Charles; Roelofsen, Floris (11 February 2014). "Questions". In Zalta, Edward (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University. Retrieved 2021-01-25.
  • Dayal, Veneeta (2002). "Single-pair versus multiple-pair answers: Wh-in-situ and scope". Linguistic Inquiry. 33 (3): 512–20. doi:10.1162/ling.2002.33.3.512. S2CID 17746106.
  • Dayal, Veneeta (2016). Questions. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Groenendijk, J.; Stokhof, M. (1982). "Semantic analysis of wh-complements". Linguistics and Philosophy. 5 (2): 175–233. doi:10.1007/BF00351052. S2CID 56774470.
  • Groenendijk, J.; Stokhof, M. (1984). Studies on the semantics of questions and the pragmatics of answers (Thesis). Univeriteit van Amsterdam.
  • Hamblin, Charles L. (1973). "Questions in Montague English". Foundations of Language. 10: 41–53.
  • Huddleston, Rodney; Pullum, Geoff (2002). The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language. Cambridge University Press. pp. 972–991. ISBN 978-0521431460.
  • Isaacs, James; Rawlins, Kyle (2008). "Conditional questions". Journal of Semantics. 25 (3): 269–319. doi:10.1093/jos/ffn003.
  • Karttunen, Lauri (1977). "Syntax and semantics of questions". Linguistics and Philosophy. 1 (1): 3–44. doi:10.1007/BF00351935. S2CID 64174420.
  • Theiler, Nadine; Roelofsen, Floris; Aloni, Maria (2018). "A uniform semantics for declarative and interrogative complements". Journal of Semantics. 35 (3): 409–466. doi:10.1093/jos/ffy003.
  • Velissaratou, Sophia (2000). Conditional questions and which-interrogatives (MSc). University of Amsterdam, ILLC.

Further reading

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