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Towards a pragmatic explanation for the prevalence of upward-monotonicity in natural language: some results on communicative stability, the strongest answer condition, and exhaustification

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Published in:Linguistics and Philosophy
Format: Online Article RSS Article
Published: 2025
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container_title Linguistics and Philosophy
description
discipline_display Linguistics and Philology
discipline_facet Linguistics and Philology
format Online Article
RSS Article
genre Journal Article
id rss_article:64463
institution FRELIP
journal_source_facet Linguistics and Philosophy
publishDate 2025
publishDateSort 2025
record_format rss_article
spellingShingle Towards a pragmatic explanation for the prevalence of upward-monotonicity in natural language: some results on communicative stability, the strongest answer condition, and exhaustification
Linguistics and Philology
General
Linguistics and Philology
sub_discipline_display General
sub_discipline_facet General
subject_display Linguistics and Philology
General
Linguistics and Philology
Linguistics and Philology
General
Linguistics and Philology
subject_facet Linguistics and Philology
General
Linguistics and Philology
title Towards a pragmatic explanation for the prevalence of upward-monotonicity in natural language: some results on communicative stability, the strongest answer condition, and exhaustification
title_auth Towards a pragmatic explanation for the prevalence of upward-monotonicity in natural language: some results on communicative stability, the strongest answer condition, and exhaustification
title_full Towards a pragmatic explanation for the prevalence of upward-monotonicity in natural language: some results on communicative stability, the strongest answer condition, and exhaustification
title_fullStr Towards a pragmatic explanation for the prevalence of upward-monotonicity in natural language: some results on communicative stability, the strongest answer condition, and exhaustification
title_full_unstemmed Towards a pragmatic explanation for the prevalence of upward-monotonicity in natural language: some results on communicative stability, the strongest answer condition, and exhaustification
title_short Towards a pragmatic explanation for the prevalence of upward-monotonicity in natural language: some results on communicative stability, the strongest answer condition, and exhaustification
title_sort towards a pragmatic explanation for the prevalence of upward-monotonicity in natural language: some results on communicative stability, the strongest answer condition, and exhaustification
topic Linguistics and Philology
General
Linguistics and Philology
url https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10988-025-09437-9