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- Donkey_sentence abstract "Donkey sentences are sentences that contain a donkey pronoun or donkey anaphora. Such pronouns or anaphoric expressions may also be called d-type or e-type pronoun, depending on theoretical approach to interpretation.A donkey pronoun is a pronoun that is bound in semantics but not syntax. Some writers prefer the term "donkey anaphora", since it is the referential aspects and discourse or syntactic context that are of interest to researchers (see anaphora).The following sentences are examples of donkey sentences.Every farmer who owns a donkey beats it. — Peter Geach (1962), Reference and Generality Every police officer who arrested a murderer insulted him.Such sentences are significant because they represent a class of well-formed natural-language sentences that defy straightforward attempts to generate their formal language equivalents. The difficulty is with understanding how English speakers parse the scope of quantification in such sentences.Peter Geach's original donkey sentence was a counterexample to Richard Montague's proposal for a generalized formal representation of quantification in natural language. The example was reused by David Lewis (1975), Gareth Evans (1977) and many others, and is still quoted in recent publications.".
- Donkey_sentence wikiPageExternalLink books?hl=en&lr=&id=clYhtZ3RdTIC&oi=fnd&pg=PA1&dq=hans+kamp&ots=VpW0df39DM&sig=t_IQKL__NvUhJay3INoH7Bjdjlc.
- Donkey_sentence wikiPageExternalLink books?id=EHuiqtSwgv8C&pg=PR6&lpg=PR6&dq=logical+form+james+huang+university&source=web&ots=ApZYb_mjwz&sig=Y_HCVE4B51WqrsZkpPjXDKFTcOY&hl=en.
- Donkey_sentence wikiPageExternalLink books?id=GA1Mr2xx5rUC&pg=PA54&lpg=PA54&dq=%22donkey+pronoun%22&source=web&ots=C19MpQ4-44&sig=o5tUkGAsG1pfOK6aRTZVKs28Z5s&hl=en.
- Donkey_sentence wikiPageExternalLink books?id=Iqx80pAilKcC&pg=PA97&dq=%22adverbs+of+quantification%22+%22cast+of+characters%22&sig=XUVYIRzLEjd-nPAi_2wq-J1DcdA.
- Donkey_sentence wikiPageExternalLink books?id=ZIqGqn98OOMC&pg=PA303&lpg=PA303&dq=%22a+presuppositional+account+of+proportional+ambiguity%22&source=web&ots=0CAAK5sHZ8&sig=2DamB3jw3NRit9ebKBHXd7S2kwE&hl=en.
- Donkey_sentence wikiPageExternalLink drt.pdf.
- Donkey_sentence wikiPageExternalLink 383.
- Donkey_sentence wikiPageExternalLink discourse-representation-theory.
- Donkey_sentence wikiPageExternalLink montague73.pdf.
- Donkey_sentence wikiPageExternalLink donkey_pluralities_aug2007.html.
- Donkey_sentence wikiPageExternalLink knott.html.
- Donkey_sentence wikiPageExternalLink donkey.html.
- Donkey_sentence wikiPageExternalLink hpl-drt.pdf.
- Donkey_sentence wikiPageExternalLink donkeys.pdf.
- Donkey_sentence wikiPageExternalLink 10988.
- Donkey_sentence wikiPageExternalLink gh791025x82x6766.
- Donkey_sentence wikiPageExternalLink h1145h642pr81r5r.
- Donkey_sentence wikiPageExternalLink h341505636560743.
- Donkey_sentence wikiPageExternalLink u533354617l67818.
- Donkey_sentence wikiPageID "16183619".
- Donkey_sentence wikiPageRevisionID "601451740".
- Donkey_sentence hasPhotoCollection Donkey_sentence.
- Donkey_sentence subject Category:Pronouns.
- Donkey_sentence subject Category:Quantification.
- Donkey_sentence subject Category:Semantics.
- Donkey_sentence comment "Donkey sentences are sentences that contain a donkey pronoun or donkey anaphora. Such pronouns or anaphoric expressions may also be called d-type or e-type pronoun, depending on theoretical approach to interpretation.A donkey pronoun is a pronoun that is bound in semantics but not syntax.".
- Donkey_sentence label "Donkey sentence".
- Donkey_sentence sameAs m.03wc63n.
- Donkey_sentence sameAs Q5296238.
- Donkey_sentence sameAs Q5296238.
- Donkey_sentence wasDerivedFrom Donkey_sentence?oldid=601451740.
- Donkey_sentence isPrimaryTopicOf Donkey_sentence.