[Sem SynSem] Kimiko Nakanishi (Ochanomizu University)

28
mar.
2022.
10h00
12h00
Implicit comparison in English and Japanese

Pouchet - salle 124 & zoom

Implicit Comparison in English and Japanese

Kennedy (2007) distinguishes between explicit comparison in (1a) that supplies the standard of comparison compositionally by using a comparative morpheme like -er, and implicit comparison in (1b) that supplies the standard contextually by using phrases like compared to. Kennedy claims that Japanese also has the two modes of comparison even though the language lacks overt comparative morphology.

(1)               a.         Al is smarter than Bill.                                                          

                        b.         Compared to Bill, Al is smart.

            In this talk, I examine semantic and pragmatic properties of a Japanese comparative construction that is not discussed in Kennedy (2007), namely, the izyoo-ni comparative in (2). By applying Kennedy’s diagnostics, I demonstrate that the izyoo-ni comparative involves implicit comparison. However, it differs from other implicit comparison such as (1b) with respect to pragmatic implications; while (1b) has negative implications in (3) (Sawada 2009), the izyoo-ni comparative has positive implications in (4) (Hayashishita 2007). I argue that (3b) and (4b) are presuppositions, from which (3a) and (4a) can be derived. I further submit that there is a connection between the meaning of implicit comparison and the meaning of focus particles, namely, (3) and (4) are related to concessivity of at least and noteworthiness of even, respectively.

(2)                   Al-wa  Bill-izyoo-ni   kasikoi.

                        Al-top Bill-more-dat smart

(3)                   a.         Al is not (definitely) smart

                            b.         Bill is not smart

(4)                   a.         Al is (definitely) smart

                            b.         Bill is smart

Lastly, the current analysis suggests that there is variation in implicit comparison depending on the kind of presuppositions introduced, which leads us to further crosslinguistic typological research of implicit comparison.

References

  • Hayashishita, J.-R. 2007. Izyoo(ni)- and gurai-comparatives: Comparisons of deviation in Japanese. Gengo Kenkyu 132. 77–109.
  • Kennedy, Christopher. 2007. Modes of comparison. Papers from the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Chicago Linguistic Society. Volume 1: The Main Session. 141–165.
  • Sawada, Osamu. 2009. Pragmatic aspects of implicit comparison: An economy-based approach. Journal of Pragmatics 41. 1079–1103.