Content area

Abstract

This paper argues for the reality of specificity as noteworthiness, a concept built upon Fodor and Sag’s (1982) view of referentiality. Support for this view of specificity comes from the behavior of indefinite this in spoken English, as well as from specificity markers in Samoan, Hebrew, and Sissala. It is shown that the conditions on the use of this-indefinites cannot be accounted for by previous analyses of specificity. The relationship between definiteness and specificity in article systems crosslinguistically is examined, and a distinction between presuppositions and felicity conditions is argued for. Additional evidence for the reality of specificity comes from a study of article choice in the English of adult second language learners (whose L1s, Russian and Korean, lack articles). It is shown that the learners’ errors are tied to specificity: they consist largely of overuse of the in specific indefinite contexts, and overuse of a in non-specific definite contexts. It is concluded that specificity is a universal semantic distinction, which receives morphological expression crosslinguistically and is available to second language learners.

Details

Title
This is Definitely Specific: Specificity and Definiteness in Article Systems
Author
Ionin, Tania 1 

 Linguistics Department, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA 
Pages
175-234
Publication year
2006
Publication date
Jun 2006
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
0925854X
e-ISSN
1572865X
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1962740860
Copyright
Copyright Springer Science & Business Media Jun 2006