TY - JOUR
T1 - What bilingualism can tell us about the Semantic Subset Principle
T2 - The case of disjunction under negation
AU - Silleresi, Silvia
AU - Pagliarini, Elena
AU - Guasti, Maria Teresa
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025.
PY - 2025/4/25
Y1 - 2025/4/25
N2 - This study investigates the interpretation of disjunction words (Italian ‘o’) in negative sentences by Italian monolingual and bilingual (L1 Italian – L2 English) children and Italian adults. Participants were asked to judge Italian sentences corresponding to the English sentence ‘This animal did not eat the carrot or the pepper’. According to the Semantic Subset Principle (SSP), children’s initial scope assignment corresponds to the interpretation that makes sentences true in the narrowest range of circumstances (the ‘neither’ interpretation), even when this is not the interpretation assigned by adults. This study aimed to: (a) replicate previous findings, showing that Italian monolingual children display a binomial group distribution and possibly a three-stage developmental sequence, directly linked to their (delayed) sensitivity to the pragmatic inference of ‘exclusivity’; and (b) investigating whether exposure to a second language (in which the default value corresponds to the value expected by the SSP) may trigger attrition effects of the L2 on the L1 at a semantic level, leading children to primarily assign disjunction a –PPI value in Italian, influenced both by the SSP and L1 attrition. Results showed that Italian monolingual children were divided into two groups: one interpreted disjunction as taking scope over negation as adults did, while the other interpreted negation as taking scope over disjunction, as predicted by the SSP. In addition, they displayed the three-stage developmental pattern observed in prior research. All bilingual children, instead, systematically adopted a ‘neither’ interpretation of disjunction under negation in Italian, showing an attrition effect of the L2 (English) on the L1 (Italian) at the semantics level. We interpret these results as indicating that being exposed to an L2, while still being guided by the SSP, acts for bilingual children as a super-additive factor in setting the Disjunction Parameter in their L1.
AB - This study investigates the interpretation of disjunction words (Italian ‘o’) in negative sentences by Italian monolingual and bilingual (L1 Italian – L2 English) children and Italian adults. Participants were asked to judge Italian sentences corresponding to the English sentence ‘This animal did not eat the carrot or the pepper’. According to the Semantic Subset Principle (SSP), children’s initial scope assignment corresponds to the interpretation that makes sentences true in the narrowest range of circumstances (the ‘neither’ interpretation), even when this is not the interpretation assigned by adults. This study aimed to: (a) replicate previous findings, showing that Italian monolingual children display a binomial group distribution and possibly a three-stage developmental sequence, directly linked to their (delayed) sensitivity to the pragmatic inference of ‘exclusivity’; and (b) investigating whether exposure to a second language (in which the default value corresponds to the value expected by the SSP) may trigger attrition effects of the L2 on the L1 at a semantic level, leading children to primarily assign disjunction a –PPI value in Italian, influenced both by the SSP and L1 attrition. Results showed that Italian monolingual children were divided into two groups: one interpreted disjunction as taking scope over negation as adults did, while the other interpreted negation as taking scope over disjunction, as predicted by the SSP. In addition, they displayed the three-stage developmental pattern observed in prior research. All bilingual children, instead, systematically adopted a ‘neither’ interpretation of disjunction under negation in Italian, showing an attrition effect of the L2 (English) on the L1 (Italian) at the semantics level. We interpret these results as indicating that being exposed to an L2, while still being guided by the SSP, acts for bilingual children as a super-additive factor in setting the Disjunction Parameter in their L1.
KW - Bilingualism
KW - Disjunction
KW - First language attrition
KW - Negation
KW - Semantic Subset Principle
KW - Semantics
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105004003140&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/01427237251331306
DO - 10.1177/01427237251331306
M3 - Article
SN - 0142-7237
JO - First Language
JF - First Language
ER -