Frontiers in Psychology (Jun 2019)

It's Not What You Expected! The Surprising Nature of Cleft Alternatives in French and English

  • Emilie Destruel,
  • David I. Beaver,
  • Elizabeth Coppock

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01400
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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While much prior literature on the meaning of clefts—such as the English form “it is X who Z-ed”—concentrates on the nature and status of the exhaustivity inference (“nobody/nothing other than X Z”), we report on experiments examining the role of the doxastic status of alternatives on the naturalness of c'est-clefts in French and it-clefts in English. Specifically, we study the hypothesis that clefts indicate a conflict with a doxastic commitment held by some discourse participant. Results from naturalness tasks suggest that clefts are improved by a property we term “contrariness” (along the lines of Zimmermann, 2008). This property has a gradient effect on felicity judgments: the more strongly interlocutors appear committed to an apparently false notion, the better it is to repudiate them with a cleft.

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