Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on the contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- I QUANTIFICATION IN NATURAL LANGUAGE
- Adverbs of quantification
- Deletion and variable binding
- A semantics for superficial and embedded questions in natural language
- Sortal quantification
- II REFERENCE AND CROSS REFERENCE
- III INTENSIONAL LOGIC AND SYNTACTIC THEORY
- IV QUESTIONING MODEL THEORETIC SEMANTICS
- V PRAGMATICS AND SENTENCES IN CONTEXT
- VI SEMANTICS AND SURFACE SYNTAX
Adverbs of quantification
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on the contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- I QUANTIFICATION IN NATURAL LANGUAGE
- Adverbs of quantification
- Deletion and variable binding
- A semantics for superficial and embedded questions in natural language
- Sortal quantification
- II REFERENCE AND CROSS REFERENCE
- III INTENSIONAL LOGIC AND SYNTACTIC THEORY
- IV QUESTIONING MODEL THEORETIC SEMANTICS
- V PRAGMATICS AND SENTENCES IN CONTEXT
- VI SEMANTICS AND SURFACE SYNTAX
Summary
Cast of characters
The adverbs I wish to consider fall into six groups of near-synonyms, as follows.
Always, invariably, universally, without exception
Sometimes, occasionally, [once]
Never
Usually, mostly, generally, almost always, with few exceptions, [ordinarily], [normally]
Often, frequently, commonly
Seldom, infrequently, rarely, almost never
Bracketed items differ semantically from their list-mates in ways I shall not consider here; omit them if you prefer.
First guess: quantifiers over times?
It may seem plausible, especially if we stop with the first word 011 each list, that these adverbs function as quantifiers over times. That is to say that always, for instance, is a modifier that combines with a sentence Φ to make a sentence Always Φ that is true iff the modified sentence Φ, is true at all times. Likewise, we might guess that Sometimes Φ, Never Φ, Usually Φ, Often Φ, and Seldom Φ are true, respectively, iff Φ is true at some times, none, most, many, or few. But it is easy to find various reasons why this first guess is too simple.
First, we may note that the times quantified over need not be moments of time. They can be suitable stretches of time instead. For instance,
(7) The fog usually lifts before noon here
means that the sentence modified by usually is true on most days, not at most moments. Indeed, what is it for that sentence to be true at a moment?
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- Formal Semantics of Natural Language , pp. 3 - 15Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1975
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