Negative sensitive items and the discourse-configurational nature of Japanese
Author(s)
Miyagawa, Shigeru; Nishioka, Nobuaki; Zeijlstra, Hedde
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We take up three Negative Sensitive Items (NSIs) in Japanese, Wh-MO plain negative indefinites, exceptive XP-sika, and certain minimizing indefinites, such as rokuna N (‘any decent N’). Although these three NSIs behave differently, we demonstrate that the two traditional NSI categories of Negative Concord Items (NCIs) and Negative Polarity Items (NPIs) are sufficient for characterizing these items. We argue that Wh-MO and XP-sika are NCIs, thus they contain a neg feature ([uneg]) which enters into (upward) agreement with its corresponding an uninterpretable feature ([ineg]). The third NSI, rokuna N, is an NPI. Two issues arise with XP-sika. First, it has an inherent focus feature, which distinguishes it from the other two. Second, this focus feature is syntactically active – meaning that movement is forced – only for the argument XP-sika. We argue that these properties of XP-sika associated with focus are independent of NP-sika as an NSI, and should be dealt with as an overall property of Japanese being a discourse configurational language. We introduce a case-theoretic solution to how focus becomes syntactically active solely with argument XP-sika.
Date issued
2016-09Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Linguistics and PhilosophyJournal
Glossa: a journal of general linguistics
Publisher
Ubiquity Press, Ltd.
Citation
Miyagawa, Shigeru, et al. “Negative Sensitive Items and the Discourse-Configurational Nature of Japanese.” Glossa: a Journal of General Linguistics 1, 1 (September 2016): 33 © 2016 The Author(s)
Version: Final published version
ISSN
2397-1835