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Does hearing “and” help children understand “or”? Insights into scales and relevance from the acquisition of disjunction in child Romanian

  • Adina Camelia Bleotu
  • , Mara Panaitescu
  • , Gabriela Bîlbîie
  • , Alexandre Cremers
  • , Andreea Cristina Nicolae
  • , Anton Benz
  • , Lyn Tieu
    • University of Bucharest
    • University of Vienna
    • Vilnius University
    • Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft (ZAS)
    • University of Toronto
    • Macquarie University

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    2 Citations (Scopus)
    14 Downloads (Pure)

    Abstract

    Children are known to derive more implicatures when the required alternative is made salient through contrast or when it is made contextually relevant through a story or a Question Under Discussion. We investigated the exclusivity implicature of three disjunctions (sau “or”, sau… sau, and fie…fie “either…or”) in child Romanian, an understudied language in the previous literature. Three experiments reveal that the mere presence of the stronger alternative, that is, simply hearing unrelated conjunctive statements in the course of the experiment, is not enough to boost implicatures. Rather, implicatures increase as a result of both access to alternatives and contextual relevance (expressed through conjunctive questions such as Did the hen push the train and the boat?). Interestingly, the boost in implicatures was observed only for sau-based disjunctions, not for fie…fie, which we conjecture may be due to children treating the latter as ambiguous between disjunction and conjunction.

    Original languageEnglish
    Number of pages34
    JournalJournal of Child Language
    DOIs
    Publication statusE-pub ahead of print (In Press) - 2025

    Keywords

    • alternatives
    • disjunction
    • experimental pragmatics
    • implicatures
    • relevance

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