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      Acquisition of quantifier raising of a universal across an existential: Evidence from German

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      Glossa: a journal of general linguistics
      Ubiquity Press, Ltd.

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          Abstract

          Our paper reports an act out task with German 5- and 6-year olds and adults involving doubly-quantified sentences with a universal object and an existential subject. We found that 5- and 6-year olds allow inverse scope in such sentences, while adults do not. Our findings contribute to a growing body of research (e.g. Gualmini et al. 2008; Musolino 2009, etc.) showing that children are more flexible in their scopal considerations than initially proposed by the Isomorphism proposal (Lidz &amp; Musolino 2002; Musolino &amp; Lidz 2006). This result provides support for a theory of German, a “no quantifier raising”-language, in terms of soft violable constraints, or global economy terms (Bobaljik &amp; Wurmbrand 2012), rather than in terms of hard inviolable constraints or rules (Frey 1993). Finally, the results are compatible with Reinhart’s (2004) hypothesis that children do not perform global interface economy considerations due to the increased processing associated with it.This article is part of the special collection: <a href="/collections/special/acquisition-of-quantification/">Acquisition of Quantification</a> 

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Glossa: a journal of general linguistics
          Glossa
          Ubiquity Press, Ltd.
          2397-1835
          January 20 2017
          May 10 2017
          : 2
          : 1
          : 46
          Article
          10.5334/gjgl.261
          27feedef-f10f-4f89-aafb-0718fae6f5d2
          © 2017
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