Hostname: page-component-5f7774ffb-gsx72 Total loading time: 0.001 Render date: 2026-02-19T15:18:38.436Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Quantifiers undone: Reversing predictable speech errors in comprehension

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 February 2026

Lyn Frazier*
Affiliation:
University of Massachusetts Amherst
Charles Clifton Jr.*
Affiliation:
University of Massachusetts Amherst
*
Frazier, Department of Linguistics, University of Massachusetts Amherst Amherst, MA 01003 [lyn@linguist.umass.edu]
Clifton, Department of Psychology, University of Massachusetts Amherst Amherst, MA 01003 [cec@psychology.umass.edu]

Abstract

Speakers predictably make errors during spontaneous speech. Listeners may identify such errors and repair the input, or their analysis of the input, accordingly. Two written questionnaire studies investigated error compensation mechanisms in sentences with doubled quantifiers such as Many students often turn in their assignments late. Results show a considerable number of undoubled interpretations for all items tested (though fewer for sentences containing doubled negation than for sentences containing many-often, every-always, or few-seldom). This evidence shows that the compositional form-meaning pairing supplied by the grammar is not the only systematic mapping between form and meaning. Implicit knowledge of the workings of the performance systems provides an additional mechanism for pairing sentence form and meaning. Alternate accounts of the data based on either a concord interpretation or an emphatic interpretation of the doubled quantifier do not explain why listeners fail to apprehend the ‘extra meaning’ added by the potentially redundant material only in limited circumstances.

Information

Type
Short Report
Copyright
Copyright © 2011 Linguistic Society of America

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Article purchase

Temporarily unavailable

References

Arregui, Ana, Clifton, Charles Jr., Frazier, Lyn; and Moulton, Keir. 2006. Processing elided VPs with flawed antecedents. Journal of Memory and Language 55.232–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barbiers, Sjef, Koeneman, Olaf, Lekakou, Marika; and van, Margreet Ham, der (eds.) 2008. Syntax and semantics, vol. 36: Microvariation in syntactic doubling. Bingley: Emerald.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bock, Kathryn, and Miller, Carol A.. 1991. Broken agreement. Cognitive Psychology 23.4593.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Chomsky, Noam. 1996. The minimalist program. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Coppock, Elizabeth. 2006. Alignment in syntactic blending. MIT Working Papers in Linguistics 13.239–55.Google Scholar
Cutting, J. Cooper, and Bock, Kathryn. 1997. That's the way the cookie bounces: Syntactic and semantic components of experimentally elicited idiom blends. Memory & Cognition 25.5771.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ferreira, Fernanda, and Patson, Nikole. 2007. The ‘good enough’ approach to language comprehension. Language and Linguistic Compass 1.7183.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frazier, Lyn. 2008. Is ‘good enough’ parsing good enough? Festschrift in honour of Ino Flores d'Arcais, ed. by Arcuri, Luciano, Boscolo, Pietro, and Persotti, Francesca, 1330. Padua: University of Padua Press.Google Scholar
Frazier, Lyn, and Charles Clifton, Jr. 2012. Dynamic interpretation: Finding an antecedent for VPE. (University of Massachusetts occasional papers in linguistics.) Amherst: GLSA Publications, to appear.Google Scholar
Garnham, Alan, and Oakhill, Jane. 1987. Interpreting elliptical VPs. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 39A.611–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ghomeshi, Jila, Jackendoff, Ray, Rosen, Nicole; and Russell, Kevin. 2004. Contrastive focus reduplication in English. Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 22.307–57.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Horn, Larry. 2009. Hypernegation, hyponegation and parole violation. Berkeley Linguistics Society 35.403–23.Google Scholar
Jaeger, T. Florian. 2008. Categorical data analysis: Away from ANOVAs (transformation or not) and towards logit mixed models. Journal of Memory and Language 59.434–46.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kawachi, Kazuhiro. 2002. Practice effect in speech production planning: Evidence from slips of the tongue in spontaneous speech vs preplanned speech in Japanese. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research 31.363–90.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mehler, Jacques. 1963. Some effects of grammatical transformations on the recall of English sentences. Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior 2.346–51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Otero, Carlos. 1972. Acceptable ungrammatical sentences in Spanish. Linguistic Inquiry 3.233–42.Google Scholar
Pearlmutter, Neal, Garnsey, Susan; and Bock, Kathryn. 1999. Agreement processes in sentence comprehension. Journal of Memory and Language 41.427–56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Staub, Adrian. 2009. On the interpretation of the number attraction effect: Response time evidence. Journal of Memory and Language 60.308–27.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Steiner, Ioner. 2009. Partial agreement in German: A processing issue? The fruits of empirical linguistics, vol. 2: Product, ed. by Winkler, Susanne and Featherston, Sam, 239–60. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.Google Scholar
Wagers, Matt, Lau, Ellen; and Phillips, Colin. 2009. Agreement attraction in comprehension: Representation and processes. Journal of Memory and Language 61.206–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wellwood, Alexis, Pancheva, Rumi, Hacquard, Valentine, Fults, Scott; and Phillips, Colin. 2009. The role of event comparison in comparative illusions. Poster presented at the CUNY Conference on Human Sentence Processing, Davis, CA.Google Scholar
Zeijlstra, Hedda. 2007. Doubling: The semantic driving force behind functional categories. Logic, language, and computation: 6th International Tbilisi Symposium on Logic, Language, and Computation, ed. by ten Cate, Balder D. and Zeevat, Henk W., 260–80. Berlin: Springer.Google Scholar