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Negation in Natural Language: On the Form and Meaning of Negative Elements
Author(s) -
Zeijlstra Hedde
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
language and linguistics compass
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.619
H-Index - 44
ISSN - 1749-818X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1749-818x.2007.00027.x
Subject(s) - negation , linguistics , sentence , meaning (existential) , natural (archaeology) , property (philosophy) , interpretation (philosophy) , natural language , subject (documents) , computer science , value (mathematics) , philosophy , history , epistemology , archaeology , machine learning , library science
A universal property of natural language is that every language is able to express negation. Every language has some device at its disposal to reverse the truth value of a certain sentence. However, languages may differ to quite a large extent as to how they express this negation. Not only do languages vary with respect to the position of negative elements, also the form of negative elements and the interpretation of sentences that consist of multiple negative elements are subject to broad cross‐linguistic variation. The study to the behaviour of sentential negation has therefore strongly been guided by the question as to what determines the possible ways that sentential negation can manifest itself. A conclusion of the article will be that the behaviour of negation in natural language strongly deviates from what intuitively might be expected.

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