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Bocado: scalar semantics and polarity sensitivity

Authors
  • Amaral, Patrícia1
  • 1 Department of Spanish and Portuguese, 355 North Jordan Avenue , (United States)
Type
Published Article
Journal
Zeitschrift für romanische Philologie
Publisher
De Gruyter Mouton
Publication Date
Nov 10, 2020
Volume
136
Issue
4
Pages
1114–1136
Identifiers
DOI: 10.1515/zrp-2020-0059
Source
De Gruyter
Keywords
License
Yellow

Abstract

This paper traces the developments of the noun bocado as it participates in two polarity-sensitive constructions in the history of Portuguese: the minimizer bocado ‘[not even] a bit’, a negative polarity item in Old Portuguese, and the degree adverbial um bocado ‘a bit’, which emerges in the 1700 s and is a positive polarity item. I adopt Israel’s (2011) grammar of polarity based on two lexical features, a quantitative value (q-value) and an informative value (i-value), in order to analyze the properties of these constructions as they reveal the interaction between lexical meaning and the logic of scalar reasoning. By applying this model in diachrony, I show how the logic of pragmatic scales underlies the patterns observed: a low q-value (lexical meaning) constrains the possible contexts of use of the expression in terms of the informativity of the propositions conveyed. Diachronic studies can thus shed light on the types of meaning associated with scalar terms as well as on types of scalar items.

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