Upward monotonicity

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Upward monotonicity is a property of determiners and quantifiers in Generalized Quantifier Theory. A determiner D is left upward monotone (or left monotone increasing or persistent), if D(A,B) implies D(A',B) where A' is a superset of A. It is right upward monotone (or right monotone increasing) if D(A,B) implies D(A,B'), where B subset B'.

Example

the D some is left upward monotone and right upward monotone; see the validity of the implications in (i) and (ii) respectively:

(i)  If some dogs walked, then some animals walked.
(ii) If some dogs walked rapidly, then some dogs walked.

Because the interpretations of CN' and VP' are extensions of the interpretations of CN and VP respectively, the corresponding determiner or NP is also called closed under extension.

Links

Utrecht Lexicon of Linguistics

See also


References

  • Gamut, L.T.F. 1991. Logic, language, and meaning, Univ. of Chicago Press, Chicago.
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