@article{oai:kindai.repo.nii.ac.jp:00013460, author = {西村, 香奈絵}, issue = {2}, journal = {近畿大学総合社会学部紀要:総社る, Applied sociology research review Kinki University : Social}, month = {Mar}, note = {[Abstract] This article addresses French subject indefinites in certain contexts in which they are interpreted inside the scope of negation. When appearing in the subject position, indefinites usually escape from the scope of negation. However, there are contexts which allow negation to assume scope over indefinites in the subject position: these include conditionals, interrogatives, complements of predicates of a certain type expressing surprise, and complements of phrases such as le fait que 'the fact that'. The same phenomenon can also be observed in English and Japanese. In this article, we propose the hypothesis that a complementizer carrying a purely formal trait, [unvalued neg] , serves to extend the scope of negation in these cases., 著者専攻: 理論言語学, application/pdf}, pages = {15--27}, title = {〈論文〉フランス語不定名詞句主語に否定が及ぶ事例}, volume = {2}, year = {2013}, yomi = {ニシムラ, カナエ} }