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Acquisition of Quantification

Quantification is everywhere in grammar, from syntax to pragmatics. Its acquisition has surprises: from ‘spreading’ (every applies both to dog and bone in Every dog has a bone) to implicature failure (some = not all) and distributivity (all vs. each). This volume offers fresh methodological and theoretical angles on the acquisition path for quantification, based on evidence from various languages

Guest Editor: Magda Oiry


Articles

Differences between Spanish monolingual and Spanish-English bilingual children in their calculation of entailment-based scalar implicatures
Differences between Spanish monolingual and Spanish-English bilingual children in their calculation of entailment-based scalar implicatures

Kristen Syrett, Anne Lingwall, Silvia Perez-Cortes, Jennifer Austin, Liliana Sánchez, Hannah Baker, Christina Germak and Anthony Arias-Amaya

2017-04-18 2017 • Volume 2

Also a part of:

Collection: Acquisition of Quantification

Children’s quantification with every over time
Children’s quantification with every over time

Athulya Aravind, Jill de Villiers, Peter de Villiers, Christopher J. Lonigan, Beth M. Phillips, Jeanine Clancy, Susan H. Landry, Paul R. Swank, Michael Assel, Heather B. Taylor, Nancy Eisenberg, Tracy Spinrad and Carlos Valiente

2017-05-09 2017 • Volume 2

Also a part of:

Collection: Acquisition of Quantification

Grammaticalized number, implicated presuppositions, and the plural
Grammaticalized number, implicated presuppositions, and the plural

Adam Liter, Tess Huelskamp, Christopher C. Heffner and Cristina Schmitt

2018-03-23 2018 • Volume 3

Also a part of:

Collection: Acquisition of Quantification

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