Contradictory (forward) lifetime effects and the non-future tense in Mandarin Chinese

Lifetime effects refer to the inferences about the life/death of the individual in sentences with individual-level predicates like ‘Mary is/was blue-eyed’. In English, contradictory lifetime inferences arise when the subject denotes one living and one dead individual (e.g. Saussuredead and Chomskyli...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chen, S, Husband, E
Format: Conference item
Published: Linguistic Society of America 2018
_version_ 1826266070432874496
author Chen, S
Husband, E
author_facet Chen, S
Husband, E
author_sort Chen, S
collection OXFORD
description Lifetime effects refer to the inferences about the life/death of the individual in sentences with individual-level predicates like ‘Mary is/was blue-eyed’. In English, contradictory lifetime inferences arise when the subject denotes one living and one dead individual (e.g. Saussuredead and Chomskyliving #are/??were both linguists.), but no such inferences arises in Mandarin Chinese, a language that has been considered “tenseless” due to the lack of past tense morphemes. This paper investigates the online processing of contradictory lifetime effects and presents additional empirical observations about “forward lifetime effects”, which suggest that both covert past tense and tenseless accounts of Chinese are inadequate for capturing temporal interpretations in this language; instead, finite clauses in Chinese display a Future/Non-Future distinction and are likely to possess a tense node. We discuss our findings in relation to the typology of tense as well as implications for other superficially tenseless languages.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T20:33:21Z
format Conference item
id oxford-uuid:31cc722d-0355-4eaa-ab01-fb9548f8241b
institution University of Oxford
last_indexed 2024-03-06T20:33:21Z
publishDate 2018
publisher Linguistic Society of America
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:31cc722d-0355-4eaa-ab01-fb9548f8241b2022-03-26T13:10:11ZContradictory (forward) lifetime effects and the non-future tense in Mandarin ChineseConference itemhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_5794uuid:31cc722d-0355-4eaa-ab01-fb9548f8241bSymplectic Elements at OxfordLinguistic Society of America2018Chen, SHusband, ELifetime effects refer to the inferences about the life/death of the individual in sentences with individual-level predicates like ‘Mary is/was blue-eyed’. In English, contradictory lifetime inferences arise when the subject denotes one living and one dead individual (e.g. Saussuredead and Chomskyliving #are/??were both linguists.), but no such inferences arises in Mandarin Chinese, a language that has been considered “tenseless” due to the lack of past tense morphemes. This paper investigates the online processing of contradictory lifetime effects and presents additional empirical observations about “forward lifetime effects”, which suggest that both covert past tense and tenseless accounts of Chinese are inadequate for capturing temporal interpretations in this language; instead, finite clauses in Chinese display a Future/Non-Future distinction and are likely to possess a tense node. We discuss our findings in relation to the typology of tense as well as implications for other superficially tenseless languages.
spellingShingle Chen, S
Husband, E
Contradictory (forward) lifetime effects and the non-future tense in Mandarin Chinese
title Contradictory (forward) lifetime effects and the non-future tense in Mandarin Chinese
title_full Contradictory (forward) lifetime effects and the non-future tense in Mandarin Chinese
title_fullStr Contradictory (forward) lifetime effects and the non-future tense in Mandarin Chinese
title_full_unstemmed Contradictory (forward) lifetime effects and the non-future tense in Mandarin Chinese
title_short Contradictory (forward) lifetime effects and the non-future tense in Mandarin Chinese
title_sort contradictory forward lifetime effects and the non future tense in mandarin chinese
work_keys_str_mv AT chens contradictoryforwardlifetimeeffectsandthenonfuturetenseinmandarinchinese
AT husbande contradictoryforwardlifetimeeffectsandthenonfuturetenseinmandarinchinese