Doubling of Negation
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/25643Date
2017-08-22Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Doubling of negation, where a declarative is initiated and finished with negation as shown in (1) below,
consists of two different structures: clause-initial negation and clause-final negation, and these need not
be related.
(1) Inte har jag sett honom inte. (Fenno-Swedish)
not has I seen him not
‘I have certainly not seen him’ (Bergroth 1928: 159)
Clause-initial negation, which contributes with the negative semantics in the clause, can be divided into
three subcategories according to Lindström (2009:168): (i) responsive negation, (ii) interrogative
negation, and (iii) additive negation. Out of these three subtypes, the responsive negation, which is
prosodically unstressed and primarily used in dialogues, is possible with clause-final negation yielding
thus doubling of negation. Clause-final negation does not contribute with independent negative semantics
and it is as such dependent on the presence of a negative element in the clause proper.
Publisher
University of OsloCitation
Østbø Munch CBØ, Garbacz P. Doubling of Negation. Nordic Atlas of Language Structures (NALS) Journal. 2014;1:458-466Metadata
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Copyright 2014 The Author(s)