“Won’t you?” reverse-polarity question tags in American English as a window into the semantics-pragmatics interface

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Abstract

We model the conventional meaning of utterances that combine two distinct clause types: a (positive) declarative or imperative (in rare cases, interrogative) anchor and a (negative) interrogative tag, such as won’t you?. We argue that such utterances express a single speech act, and in fact, a single conventional update of the conversational scoreboard. The proposed model of this effect is a straightforward extension of prior proposals for the semantics of declaratives, imperatives, and preposed-negation interrogatives. Ours is the first unified account of these phenomena that addresses the sentential force of these utterances and outlines how the speech act effects arise from the scoreboard update and contextual factors. We enrich the conversational scoreboard, interpreted as a model of sentential force, to include graded commitments and non-at-issue meanings. A consequence of our model is that modified utterances can create “blended” speech acts which share some, but not all, properties with the unmodified utterances. The proposal has implications for models of other utterance modifiers, as well as for negative interrogatives and negation in general, and for imperative/jussive constructions.

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Scheffler, T., & Malamud, S. A. (2023). “Won’t you?” reverse-polarity question tags in American English as a window into the semantics-pragmatics interface. Linguistics and Philosophy, 46(6), 1285–1327. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10988-023-09385-2

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