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This book presents a novel analysis of concealed-question
constructions, reports of a mental attitude in which part of a
sentence looks like a nominal complement (e.g. Eve's phone number
in Adam knows Eve's phone number), but is interpreted as an
indirect question (Adam knows what Eve's phone number is). Such
constructions are puzzling in that they raise the question of how
their meaning derives from their constituent parts. In particular,
how a nominal complement (Eve's phone number), normally used to
refer to an entity (e.g. Eve's actual phone number in Adam dialled
Eve's phone number) ends up with a question-like meaning. In this
book, Ilaria Frana adopts a theory according to which noun phrases
with concealed question meanings are analysed as individual
concepts. The traditional individual concept theory is modified and
applied to the phenomena discussed in the recent literature and
some new problematic data. The end result is a fully compositional
account of a wide range of concealed-question constructions. The
exploration of concealed questions offered in the book provides
insights into both issues in semantic theory, such as the nature of
quantification in natural languages and the use of type shifter in
the grammar, and issues surrounding the syntax-semantics interface,
such as the interpretation of copy traces and the effects on
semantic interpretation of different syntactic analyses of relative
clauses. The book will interest scholars and graduate students in
linguistics, especially those interested in semantics and the
syntax-semantics interface, as well as philosophers of language
working on the topic of intensionality.
This book presents a novel analysis of concealed-question
constructions, reports of a mental attitude in which part of a
sentence looks like a nominal complement (e.g. Eve's phone number
in Adam knows Eve's phone number), but is interpreted as an
indirect question (Adam knows what Eve's phone number is). Such
constructions are puzzling in that they raise the question of how
their meaning derives from their constituent parts. In particular,
how a nominal complement (Eve's phone number), normally used to
refer to an entity (e.g. Eve's actual phone number in Adam dialled
Eve's phone number) ends up with a question-like meaning. In this
book, Ilaria Frana adopts a theory according to which noun phrases
with concealed question meanings are analysed as individual
concepts. The traditional individual concept theory is modified and
applied to the phenomena discussed in the recent literature and
some new problematic data. The end result is a fully compositional
account of a wide range of concealed-question constructions. The
exploration of concealed questions offered in the book provides
insights into both issues in semantic theory, such as the nature of
quantification in natural languages and the use of type shifter in
the grammar, and issues surrounding the syntax-semantics interface,
such as the interpretation of copy traces and the effects on
semantic interpretation of different syntactic analyses of relative
clauses. The book will interest scholars and graduate students in
linguistics, especially those interested in semantics and the
syntax-semantics interface, as well as philosophers of language
working on the topic of intensionality.
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