AbstractsLanguage, Literature & Linguistics

The role of intonation in the use of double negatives in Dutch

by R.J. Fonville




Institution: Universiteit Utrecht
Department:
Year: 2013
Keywords: Semantics, Pragmatics, Negation, Prosody
Record ID: 1259583
Full text PDF: http://dspace.library.uu.nl:8080/handle/1874/278901


Abstract

Like for instance English, Dutch is a so-called double negation (DN) language. This means that if in Dutch you use two negatives in a single clause, they will negate each other's meaning and yield a positive interpretation. Another way to interpret double negatives is to have them together express a single negation with no cancellation; this is called negative concord (NC) and it is the expected meaning in, for instance, the NC languages Italian, Spanish, and Romanian. While Dutch is a DN language, which means we expect double negatives in Dutch to convey a DN meaning, it is still possible to convey an NC meaning in Dutch for double negatives. For this thesis, I performed a corpus study which confirmed a substantial occurrence of NC meanings for double negatives in Dutch. This lead to the main question of this thesis: to what extent do we use intonation to disambiguate between DN readings and NC readings for double negatives in Dutch? In order to answer this question I first performed a production experiment to explore the intonation patterns that are spontaneously produced when confronted with double negatives in either a DN context or an NC context. Afterwards I used the intonation patterns found in the production experiment to perform a perception experiment. This experiment aimed at finding out whether participants would indeed judge double negatives uttered with certain intonation patterns to convey either a DN meaning or an NC meaning.