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Very Necessary: The Meaning of Non-gradable Modal Adjectives in Discourse Contexts
Author(s) -
Maryam Rajestari,
Simon Dobnik,
Robin Cooper,
Aram Karimi
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
linköping electronic conference proceedings
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
eISSN - 1650-3740
pISSN - 1650-3686
DOI - 10.3384/ecp184174
Subject(s) - adjective , meaning (existential) , linguistics , modal , psychology , computer science , philosophy , noun , chemistry , polymer chemistry , psychotherapist
In this paper we provide a quantitative and qualitative analysis of meaning of allegedly non-gradable modal adjectives in different discourse contexts. The adjectives studied are essential, necessary, crucial and vital which are compared with a gradable modal adjective important. In our study sentences containing these adjectives were chosen from a large corpus together with their contexts. Then 120 English native speakers evaluated the meaning of these adjectives in a crowd-sourced study. Different types of contexts were chosen for this purpose. In some the adjectives were used as gradable with a modifier very while in others as non-gradable, without a modifier. We also modified the contexts by adding or removing the modifier very. The task for evaluators was to provide a replacement for adjectives for all the resulting contexts. From the replacements we are able to quantitatively evaluate the semantic potential of these contexts and what kind of adjectives they license.

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