Up or down? Resolving agreement in copular sentences

These files contain the anonymised raw data from 7 experiments developed and run for the BA-funded project "Up or Down? Resolving agreement in copular clauses. There are 2 sets of data - one from a production task and one from a grammaticality judgment task - for each of Dutch, German, and Faroese. There is 1 set of data from a grammaticality judgment task for Icelandic. The study investigated possible patterns of agreement in copular sentences in which there were two nominals different in either person or number or both (e.g. "The source of the rumour was/were your neighbours"; "My only hope... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Heycock, Caroline
Hartmann, Jutta M
Dokumenttyp: dataset
Erscheinungsdatum: 2018
Verlag/Hrsg.: University of Edinburgh. School of Philosophy. Psychology and Language Sciences
Schlagwörter: syntax / agreement / Scandinavian / Faroese / Icelandic / German / Dutch / copular clauses / specificational sentences / Linguistics Classics and related subjects
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27051274
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://hdl.handle.net/10283/3052

These files contain the anonymised raw data from 7 experiments developed and run for the BA-funded project "Up or Down? Resolving agreement in copular clauses. There are 2 sets of data - one from a production task and one from a grammaticality judgment task - for each of Dutch, German, and Faroese. There is 1 set of data from a grammaticality judgment task for Icelandic. The study investigated possible patterns of agreement in copular sentences in which there were two nominals different in either person or number or both (e.g. "The source of the rumour was/were your neighbours"; "My only hope is/are you"). The particular focus of the study was the possible contrasts between agreement with 3rd person pronouns and non-3rd person pronouns ("The problem is/are they" vs "The problem is/are you"). In all of the languages investigated in the study (Dutch, German, Faroese, Icelandic) prior research indicated that at least some speakers produce agreement for number with the second noun phrase ("The source of the rumour were your neighbours") in contrast to English, where agreement with the first noun phrase is strongly preferred. What this study adds is information about possibilities for person agreement. ; README.txt A summary of the contents of all the data files FAR01Prod.csv Data from the production (cloze task) study on Faroese agreement FAR01Rating.csv Data from the rating study ("thermometer rating") on Faroese agreement GER02Prod.csv Data from the production (cloze task) study on German agreement GER02Rating.csv Data from the rating study ("thermometer rating") on German agreement ICE01Rating.csv Data from the rating study ("thermometer rating") on Icelandic agreement NL02Prod.csv Data from the production (cloze task) study on Dutch agreement NL02Rating.csv Data from the rating study ("thermometer rating") on Dutch agreement