2021
DOI: 10.31234/osf.io/egxtk
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From ‘No, she does’ to ‘Yes, she does’: Negation processing in negative yes–no questions by Chinese users of English

Abstract: In response to negative yes–no questions (e.g., Doesn’t she like cats?), typical English answers (Yes, she does/No, she doesn’t) peculiarly vary from those in Mandarin (No, she does/Yes, she doesn’t). What are the processing consequences of these markedly different conventionalized linguistic responses to achieve the same communicative goals? And if English and Mandarin speakers process negative questions differently, to what extent does processing change in Mandarin–English sequential bilinguals? Two experime… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
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“…There an important difference in the two systems, arises from the distinction in how truth-based and polarity-based languages attach negation ( Zhang, 2019 ; Zhang and Vanek, 2021 ). Truth-based languages like Mandarin structurally attach negation to the question’s statement, resulting in “ Isn’t he feeling well?…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There an important difference in the two systems, arises from the distinction in how truth-based and polarity-based languages attach negation ( Zhang, 2019 ; Zhang and Vanek, 2021 ). Truth-based languages like Mandarin structurally attach negation to the question’s statement, resulting in “ Isn’t he feeling well?…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%