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Affirmation and negation

In linguistics and grammar, affirmation (abbreviated AFF) and negation (NEG) are ways in which grammar encodes positive and negative polarity into verb phrases, clauses, or other utterances. An affirmative (positive) form is used to express the validity or truth of a basic assertion, while a negative form expresses its falsity. For example, the affirmative sentence "Jane is here" asserts that it is true that Jane is currently located near the speaker. Conversely, the negative sentence "Jane is not here" asserts that it is not true that Jane is currently located near the speaker.

The grammatical category associated with affirmatives and negatives is called polarity. This means that a clause, sentence, verb phrase, etc. may be said to have either affirmative or negative polarity (its polarity may be either affirmative or negative). Affirmative is typically the unmarked polarity, whereas a negative statement is marked in some way. Negative polarity can be indicated by negating words or particles such as the English not, or the Japanese affix -nai, or by other means, which reverses the meaning of the predicate. The process of converting affirmative to negative is called negation – the grammatical rules for negation vary from language to language, and a given language may have multiple methods of negation.

Affirmative and negative responses (specifically, though not exclusively, to questions) are often expressed using particles or words such as yes and no, where yes is the affirmative, or positive particle, and no is the negation, or negative particle.

Basis for affirmation and negation

Affirmation and negation are a crucial building blocks for language. The presence of negation is the absence of affirmation, where affirmation functions individually.[1] There are three main aspects to the concept of affirmation and negation; Cognitive, psychological and philosophical (Schopenhauers theory or Nietzschean affirmation).

Cognitive

Negation in English is more difficult for the brain to process as it works in opposition to affirmation.[1] If affirmation and negation were missing from language people would only be able to communicate through possibilities.[2] The recent Reusing Inhibition for Negation (RIN) hypothesis states that there is a specific inhibitory control mechanism (one that is reused) that is needed when trying to understand negation in sentences.[3]

Affirmation

Meaning of affirmation

Affirmations or positive polarity items (PPIs) are expressions that are rejected by negation, usually escaping the scope of negation.[4] PPIs in the literature have been associated with speaker oriented adverbs, as well as expressions similar to some, already, and would rather.[4] Affirmative sentences work in opposition to negations. The affirmative, in an English example such as "the police chief here is a woman", declares a simple fact, in this case, it is a fact regarding the police chief and asserts that she is a woman.[5] In contrast, the negative, in an English example such as "the police chief here is not a man", is stated as an assumption for people to believe.[5] It is also widely believed that the affirmative is the unmarked base form from which the negative is produced, but this can be argued when coming from a pragmatic standpoint.[5] Pragmatically, affirmatives can sometimes derive the pragmatically unmarked form, or, at times, create novel affirmative derivatives.[5]

Affirmation can also be compared to the notion of assertiveness.

Affirmation in English

Affirmation can be indicated with the following words in English: some, certainly, already, and would rather.[4] Two examples of affirmation include (1) John is here already[4] and (2) I am a moral person.[5] These two sentences are truth statements, and serve as a representation of affirmation in English. The negated versions can be formed as the statements (1NEG) John is not here already and (2NEG) I am not a moral person.

(1)
a. John is here already[4] (affirmative)
b. John might be here already (modal)
c. John is not here already (negative)
  •  

    Syntax tree of (1a) John is here already (affirmative)

  •  

    Syntax tree of (1b) John might be here already (modal)

  •  

    Syntax tree of (1c) John is not a moral person (negative)

  • (2)

    a. I am a moral person[5] (affirmative)
    b. I might be a moral person (modal)
    c. I am not a moral person (negative)
  •  

    Syntax tree of (2a) I am a moral person (affirmative)

  •  

    Syntax tree of (2b) I might be a moral person (modal)

  •  

    Syntax tree of (2c) I am not a moral person (negative)


  • Affirmation in other languages

    Dagaare

    In Dagaare, there are verbal suffixes, such as -ng, that serve as an affirmation or an emphasis to a verbal action.[6] These verbal suffixes are also known as a focus particle or a factitive marker.

    (3) ò kyɛ́ng-ɛ́ɛ́-ńg (affirmative)
    "S/he has walked"

    There are also cases of the identifying pronoun na developing into an affirmative marker. na is reanalyzed into a clause final particle simultaneously with the denominalisation of the clausal subject which brings the result of na as a clause nominalising particle which can again be reanalyzed as a positive, future, marker.[7] This clause final particle is known to only be used to mark assertiveness in positive clauses because it is not seen co-occurring with negative markers.[7]

    (4) ɭ̃ na cen na (affirmative)
    "I will go"

    Negation

    Meaning of negation

    Simple grammatical negation of a clause, in principle, has the effect of converting a proposition to its logical negation. This is done by replacing an assertion that something is the case with an assertion that it is not the case.

    In some cases, however, particularly when a particular modality is expressed, the semantic effect of negation may be somewhat different. For example, in English, the meaning of "you must not go" is not the exact negation of "you must go". The exact negation of this phrase would be expressed as "you don't have to go" or "you needn't go". The negation "must not" has a stronger meaning (the effect is to apply the logical negation to the following infinitive rather than applying it to the full clause with must). For more details and other similar cases, see the relevant sections of English modal verbs.

    Negation flips downward entailing and upward entailing statements within the scope of the negation. For example, changing "one could have seen anything" to "no one could have seen anything" changes the meaning of the last word from "anything" to "nothing".

    In some cases, by way of irony, an affirmative statement may be intended to have the meaning of the corresponding negative, or vice versa. For examples see antiphrasis and sarcasm.

    For the use of double negations or similar as understatements ("not unappealing", "not bad", etc.) see litotes.

    Grammatical rules for negation

    Simple negation of verbs and clauses

    Languages have a variety of grammatical rules for converting affirmative verb phrases or clauses into negative ones.

    In many languages, an affirmative is made negative by the addition of a particle, meaning "not". This may be added before the verb phrase, as with the Spanish no:

    (5)
    a. Está en casa (affirmative)
    "(S)he is at home"
    b. No está en casa (negative)
    "(S)he is not at home"

    Other examples of negating particles preceding the verb phrase include Italian non, Russian не nye and Polish nie (they can also be found in constructed languages: ne in Esperanto and non in Interlingua). In some other languages the negating particle follows the verb or verb phrase, as in Dutch:

    (6)
    a. Ik zie hem (affirmative)
    "I see him"
    b. Ik zie hem niet (negative)
    "I do not see him"
     
    Syntax tree for (6b) Ik zie hem niet (negative)

    Particles following the verb in this way include not in archaic and dialectal English ("you remember not"), nicht in German (ich schlafe nicht, "I am not sleeping"), and inte in Swedish (han hoppade inte, "he did not jump").

    In French, particles are added both before the verb phrase (ne) and after the verb (pas):

    (7)
    a. Je sais (affirmative)
    "I know"
    b. Je (ne) sais pas (negative)
    "I don't know"
     
    Syntax tree for (7b) Je sais pas (negative)

    However, in colloquial French the first particle is often omitted: Je sais pas. Similar use of two negating particles can also be found in Afrikaans: Hy kan nie Afrikaans praat nie ("He cannot speak Afrikaans").

    In English, negation is achieved by adding not after the verb. As a practical matter, Modern English typically uses a copula verb (a form of be) or an auxiliary verb with not. If no other auxiliary verb is present, then dummy auxiliary do (does, did) is normally introduced – see do-support. For example,

    (8)
    a. I have gone (affirmative)
    b. I have not gone (negative; have is the auxiliary)
    (9)
    a. He goes (affirmative)
    b. #He goes not (negative)

    but that wording is considered archaic and is rarely used. It is much more common to use the dummy auxiliary to render

    • He does not go (since there is no auxiliary in the original sentence)

    Different rules apply in subjunctive, imperative and non-finite clauses. For more details see English grammar § Negation. (In Middle English, the particle not could follow any verb, e.g. "I see not the horse.")

    In some languages, like Welsh, verbs have special inflections to be used in negative clauses. (In some language families, this may lead to reference to a negative mood.) An example is Japanese, which conjugates verbs in the negative after adding the suffix -nai (indicating negation), e.g. taberu ("eat") and tabenai ("do not eat"). It could be argued that English has joined the ranks of these languages, since negation requires the use of an auxiliary verb and a distinct syntax in most cases; the form of the basic verb can change on negation, as in "he sings" vs. "he doesn't sing". Zwicky and Pullum have shown that n't is an inflectional suffix, not a clitic or a derivational suffix.[8]

    Complex rules for negation also apply in Finnish; see Finnish grammar § Negation of verbs. In some languages negation may also affect the dependents of the verb; for example in some Slavic languages, such as Polish, the case of a direct object often changes from accusative to genitive when the verb is negated.

    Negation of other elements

    Negation can be applied not just to whole verb phrases, clauses or sentences, but also to specific elements (such as adjectives and noun phrases) within sentences.[9] This contrast is usually labeled sentential negation versus constituent negation.[10] Ways in which this constituent negation is realized depends on the grammar of the language in question. English generally places not before the negated element, as in "I witnessed not a debate, but a war." There are also negating affixes, such as the English prefixes non-, un-, in-, etc. Such elements are called privatives.

    Multiple negation

    There also exist elements which carry a specialized negative meaning, including pronouns such as nobody, none and nothing, determiners such as no (as in "no apples"), and adverbs such as never, no longer and nowhere.

    Although such elements themselves have negative force, in some languages a clause in which they appear is additionally marked for ordinary negation. For example, in Russian, "I see nobody" is expressed as я никого́ не ви́жу ja nikovó nye vízhu, literally "I nobody not see" – the ordinary negating particle не nye ("not") is used in addition to the negative pronoun никого́ nikovó ("nobody"). Italian behaves in a similar way: Non ti vede nessuno, "nobody can see you", although Nessuno ti vede is also a possible clause with exactly the same meaning.

    The negative in other languages

    Russian

    In Russian, all of the elements ("not", "never", "nobody", "nowhere") would appear together in the sentence in their negative form.

    Italian

    In Italian, a clause works much as in Russian, but non does not have to be there, and can be there only before the verb if it precedes all other negative elements: Tu non porti mai nessuno da nessuna parte. "Nobody ever brings you anything here", however, could be translated Nessuno qui ti porta mai niente or Qui non ti porta mai niente nessuno.

    French

    In French, where simple negation is performed using ne ... pas (see above), specialized negatives appear in combination with the first particle (ne), but pas is omitted:

    (10)
    a. Je ne bois jamais ("I never drink")
    b. Je ne vois personne ("I see nobody")
    c. Je n'ai jamais vu personne ("I have never seen anybody")

    Ancient Greek

    In Ancient Greek, a simple negative (οὐ ou "not" or μή mḗ "not (modal)") following another simple or compound negative (e.g. οὐδείς oudeís "nobody") results in an affirmation, whereas a compound negative following a simple or compound negative strengthens the negation:

    • οὐδεὶς οὐκ ἔπασχέ τι oudeìs ouk épaskhé ti, "nobody was not suffering something", i.e. "everybody was suffering"
    • μὴ θορυβήσῃ μηδείς mḕ thorubḗsēi mēdeís, "let (not) nobody raise an uproar", meaning "let nobody raise an uproar"

    Dagaare

    In Dagaare, negation is marked specifically by pre-verb particles, where only four, out of the nearly 24 pre-verb particles, are designated as negation markers.[11] The four negation markers are ba, kʊ̀ŋ, ta, and tɔ́ɔ́.[11] To signal negation, as well as other semantic relation, these negation particles combine with different aspects of the verb.[11] These pre-verb negatory particles can also be used to convey tense, mood, aspect, and polarity (negation), and in some cases can be used to convey more than one of these features.[11]

    For example, the negation marker ta can be used to indicate polarity and mood:

    • Ta zo! (Do not run!), indicates negative imperative construction

    For example, the negation marker ba can be used as a non-future, or present tense, negative marker:

    • a mɔnaabʊ ba kʊ a naŋkpaana (The buffalo has not killed the hunter), has ba used with the perfective A and imperfective A forms of the verb to indicate negation in the present tense

    Sign Languages

    Various signed and manual languages are known to negate via headshake.[12]


    Affirmative and negative responses

    Special affirmative and negative words (particles) are often found in responses to questions, and sometimes to other assertions by way of agreement or disagreement. In English, these are yes and no respectively, in French oui, si and non, in Swedish ja, jo and nej, in Spanish and no and so on. Not all languages make such common use of particles of this type; in some (such as Welsh) it is more common to repeat the verb or another part of the predicate, with or without negation accordingly.

    Complications sometimes arise in the case of responses to negative statements or questions; in some cases the response that confirms a negative statement is the negative particle (as in English: "You're not going out? No."), but in some languages this is reversed. Some languages have a distinct form to answer a negative question, such as French si and Swedish jo (these serve to contradict the negative statement suggested by the first speaker).

    See also

    References

    1. ^ a b Spychalska, Maria; Kontinen, Jarmo; Werning, Markus (2016-04-29). "Investigating scalar implicatures in a truth-value judgement task: evidence from event-related brain potentials". Language, Cognition and Neuroscience. 31 (6): 817–840. doi:10.1080/23273798.2016.1161806. ISSN 2327-3798. S2CID 124648175.
    2. ^ Jordan, Michael P (1998). "The power of negation in English: Text, context and relevance". Journal of Pragmatics. 29 (6): 705–752. doi:10.1016/S0378-2166(97)00086-6.
    3. ^ Liu, Bo; Wang, Huili; Beltrán, David; Gu, Beixian; Liang, Tengfei; Wang, Xiaoshuang; de Vega, Manuel (2019-09-05). "The generalizability of inhibition-related processes in the comprehension of linguistic negation. ERP evidence from the Mandarin language". Language, Cognition and Neuroscience. 35 (7): 885–895. doi:10.1080/23273798.2019.1662460. ISSN 2327-3798. S2CID 203052216.
    4. ^ a b c d e Giannakidou, Anastasia (2011). "Negative and Positive Polarity Items" (PDF). The University of Chicago.
    5. ^ a b c d e f Giora, Rachel (July 2006). "Anything negatives can do affirmatives can do just as well, except for some metaphors". Journal of Pragmatics. 38 (7): 981–1014. doi:10.1016/j.pragma.2005.12.006. ISSN 0378-2166.
    6. ^ Ali, M.; Grimm, S.; Bodomo, A. (2021). A dictionary and grammatical sketch of Dagaare. Vol. 4. Language Science Press. doi:10.5281/zenodo.5154710.
    7. ^ a b Mwinlaaru, Isaac N.; Yap, Foong Ha (November 2017). "A tale of two distal demonstratives in Dagaare: Reflections on directionality principles in grammaticalisation". Language Sciences. 64: 130–151. doi:10.1016/j.langsci.2017.07.005. hdl:10397/73178. ISSN 0388-0001. S2CID 148942057.
    8. ^ Zwicky, Arnold M.; Pullum, Geoffrey K. (1983), "Cliticization vs. Inflection: English n't" (PDF), Language, Linguistic Society of America, 59 (3): 502–513, doi:10.2307/413900, JSTOR 413900
    9. ^ The linguist D. Biber refers to two types of negation, synthetic ('no', 'neither' or 'nor' negation) and analytic ('not' negation). For example, "He is neither here nor there" (synthetic) or "He is not here" (analytic).
    10. ^ Bross, Fabian (2020). "The why-how alternation and a new test for sentential negation—on negated how-questions". Glossa: A Journal of General Linguistics. 5. doi:10.5334/gjgl.1175.
    11. ^ a b c d Saanchi, James Angkaaraba. "Negation In Dagaare". Legon Journal of the Humanities. 19 – via African Journals Online (AJOL).
    12. ^ "Linguistics in Amsterdam". www.linguisticsinamsterdam.nl. Retrieved 2022-11-04.

    Further reading

    • Laurence R. Horn, A Natural History of Negation. 2001. ISBN 978-1-57586-336-8
    • Douglas Biber, Susan Conrad, Randi Reppen, "Corpus Linguistics: Investigating Language Structure and Use". 1998. ISBN 0-521-49957-7
    • Tettamanti, Marco; Manenti, Rosa; Della Rosa, Pasquale A.; Falini, Andrea; Perani, Daniela; Cappa, Stefano F.; Moro, Andrea (2008). "Negation in the brain. Modulating action representation". NeuroImage. 43 (2): 358–367. doi:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2008.08.004. PMID 18771737. S2CID 17658822.

    affirmation, negation, linguistics, grammar, affirmation, abbreviated, negation, ways, which, grammar, encodes, positive, negative, polarity, into, verb, phrases, clauses, other, utterances, affirmative, positive, form, used, express, validity, truth, basic, a. In linguistics and grammar affirmation abbreviated AFF and negation NEG are ways in which grammar encodes positive and negative polarity into verb phrases clauses or other utterances An affirmative positive form is used to express the validity or truth of a basic assertion while a negative form expresses its falsity For example the affirmative sentence Jane is here asserts that it is true that Jane is currently located near the speaker Conversely the negative sentence Jane is not here asserts that it is not true that Jane is currently located near the speaker The grammatical category associated with affirmatives and negatives is called polarity This means that a clause sentence verb phrase etc may be said to have either affirmative or negative polarity its polarity may be either affirmative or negative Affirmative is typically the unmarked polarity whereas a negative statement is marked in some way Negative polarity can be indicated by negating words or particles such as the English not or the Japanese affix nai or by other means which reverses the meaning of the predicate The process of converting affirmative to negative is called negation the grammatical rules for negation vary from language to language and a given language may have multiple methods of negation Affirmative and negative responses specifically though not exclusively to questions are often expressed using particles or words such as yes and no where yes is the affirmative or positive particle and no is the negation or negative particle Contents 1 Basis for affirmation and negation 1 1 Cognitive 2 Affirmation 2 1 Meaning of affirmation 2 2 Affirmation in English 2 3 Affirmation in other languages 2 3 1 Dagaare 3 Negation 3 1 Meaning of negation 3 2 Grammatical rules for negation 3 2 1 Simple negation of verbs and clauses 3 2 2 Negation of other elements 3 2 3 Multiple negation 3 3 The negative in other languages 3 3 1 Russian 3 3 2 Italian 3 3 3 French 3 3 4 Ancient Greek 3 3 5 Dagaare 3 3 6 Sign Languages 4 Affirmative and negative responses 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingBasis for affirmation and negation EditAffirmation and negation are a crucial building blocks for language The presence of negation is the absence of affirmation where affirmation functions individually 1 There are three main aspects to the concept of affirmation and negation Cognitive psychological and philosophical Schopenhauers theory or Nietzschean affirmation Cognitive Edit Negation in English is more difficult for the brain to process as it works in opposition to affirmation 1 If affirmation and negation were missing from language people would only be able to communicate through possibilities 2 The recent Reusing Inhibition for Negation RIN hypothesis states that there is a specific inhibitory control mechanism one that is reused that is needed when trying to understand negation in sentences 3 Affirmation EditMeaning of affirmation Edit Affirmations or positive polarity items PPIs are expressions that are rejected by negation usually escaping the scope of negation 4 PPIs in the literature have been associated with speaker oriented adverbs as well as expressions similar to some already and would rather 4 Affirmative sentences work in opposition to negations The affirmative in an English example such as the police chief here is a woman declares a simple fact in this case it is a fact regarding the police chief and asserts that she is a woman 5 In contrast the negative in an English example such as the police chief here is not a man is stated as an assumption for people to believe 5 It is also widely believed that the affirmative is the unmarked base form from which the negative is produced but this can be argued when coming from a pragmatic standpoint 5 Pragmatically affirmatives can sometimes derive the pragmatically unmarked form or at times create novel affirmative derivatives 5 Affirmation can also be compared to the notion of assertiveness Affirmation in English Edit Affirmation can be indicated with the following words in English some certainly already and would rather 4 Two examples of affirmation include 1 John is here already 4 and 2 I am a moral person 5 These two sentences are truth statements and serve as a representation of affirmation in English The negated versions can be formed as the statements 1NEG John is not here already and 2NEG I am not a moral person 1 a John is here already 4 affirmative b John might be here already modal c John is not here already negative dd Syntax tree of 1a John is here already affirmative Syntax tree of 1b John might be here already modal Syntax tree of 1c John is not a moral person negative 2 a I am a moral person 5 affirmative b I might be a moral person modal c I am not a moral person negative dd Syntax tree of 2a I am a moral person affirmative Syntax tree of 2b I might be a moral person modal Syntax tree of 2c I am not a moral person negative Affirmation in other languages Edit Dagaare Edit In Dagaare there are verbal suffixes such as ng that serve as an affirmation or an emphasis to a verbal action 6 These verbal suffixes are also known as a focus particle or a factitive marker 3 o kyɛ ng ɛ ɛ ng affirmative S he has walked There are also cases of the identifying pronoun na developing into an affirmative marker na is reanalyzed into a clause final particle simultaneously with the denominalisation of the clausal subject which brings the result of na as a clause nominalising particle which can again be reanalyzed as a positive future marker 7 This clause final particle is known to only be used to mark assertiveness in positive clauses because it is not seen co occurring with negative markers 7 4 ɭ na cen na affirmative I will go Negation EditMeaning of negation Edit Simple grammatical negation of a clause in principle has the effect of converting a proposition to its logical negation This is done by replacing an assertion that something is the case with an assertion that it is not the case In some cases however particularly when a particular modality is expressed the semantic effect of negation may be somewhat different For example in English the meaning of you must not go is not the exact negation of you must go The exact negation of this phrase would be expressed as you don t have to go or you needn t go The negation must not has a stronger meaning the effect is to apply the logical negation to the following infinitive rather than applying it to the full clause with must For more details and other similar cases see the relevant sections of English modal verbs Negation flips downward entailing and upward entailing statements within the scope of the negation For example changing one could have seen anything to no one could have seen anything changes the meaning of the last word from anything to nothing In some cases by way of irony an affirmative statement may be intended to have the meaning of the corresponding negative or vice versa For examples see antiphrasis and sarcasm For the use of double negations or similar as understatements not unappealing not bad etc see litotes Grammatical rules for negation Edit Simple negation of verbs and clauses Edit Languages have a variety of grammatical rules for converting affirmative verb phrases or clauses into negative ones In many languages an affirmative is made negative by the addition of a particle meaning not This may be added before the verb phrase as with the Spanish no 5 a Esta en casa affirmative S he is at home b No esta en casa negative S he is not at home dd Other examples of negating particles preceding the verb phrase include Italian non Russian ne nye and Polish nie they can also be found in constructed languages ne in Esperanto and non in Interlingua In some other languages the negating particle follows the verb or verb phrase as in Dutch 6 a Ik zie hem affirmative I see him b Ik zie hem niet negative I do not see him Syntax tree for 6b Ik zie hem niet negative dd Particles following the verb in this way include not in archaic and dialectal English you remember not nicht in German ich schlafe nicht I am not sleeping and inte in Swedish han hoppade inte he did not jump In French particles are added both before the verb phrase ne and after the verb pas 7 a Je sais affirmative I know b Je ne sais pas negative I don t know Syntax tree for 7b Je sais pas negative dd However in colloquial French the first particle is often omitted Je sais pas Similar use of two negating particles can also be found in Afrikaans Hy kan nie Afrikaans praat nie He cannot speak Afrikaans In English negation is achieved by adding not after the verb As a practical matter Modern English typically uses a copula verb a form of be or an auxiliary verb with not If no other auxiliary verb is present then dummy auxiliary do does did is normally introduced see do support For example 8 a I have gone affirmative b I have not gone negative have is the auxiliary dd 9 a He goes affirmative b He goes not negative dd but that wording is considered archaic and is rarely used It is much more common to use the dummy auxiliary to render He does not go since there is no auxiliary in the original sentence Different rules apply in subjunctive imperative and non finite clauses For more details see English grammar Negation In Middle English the particle not could follow any verb e g I see not the horse In some languages like Welsh verbs have special inflections to be used in negative clauses In some language families this may lead to reference to a negative mood An example is Japanese which conjugates verbs in the negative after adding the suffix nai indicating negation e g taberu eat and tabenai do not eat It could be argued that English has joined the ranks of these languages since negation requires the use of an auxiliary verb and a distinct syntax in most cases the form of the basic verb can change on negation as in he sings vs he doesn t sing Zwicky and Pullum have shown that n t is an inflectional suffix not a clitic or a derivational suffix 8 Complex rules for negation also apply in Finnish see Finnish grammar Negation of verbs In some languages negation may also affect the dependents of the verb for example in some Slavic languages such as Polish the case of a direct object often changes from accusative to genitive when the verb is negated Negation of other elements Edit Negation can be applied not just to whole verb phrases clauses or sentences but also to specific elements such as adjectives and noun phrases within sentences 9 This contrast is usually labeled sentential negation versus constituent negation 10 Ways in which this constituent negation is realized depends on the grammar of the language in question English generally places not before the negated element as in I witnessed not a debate but a war There are also negating affixes such as the English prefixes non un in etc Such elements are called privatives Multiple negation Edit Main articles Double negative and Litotes There also exist elements which carry a specialized negative meaning including pronouns such as nobody none and nothing determiners such as no as in no apples and adverbs such as never no longer and nowhere Although such elements themselves have negative force in some languages a clause in which they appear is additionally marked for ordinary negation For example in Russian I see nobody is expressed as ya nikogo ne vi zhu ja nikovo nye vizhu literally I nobody not see the ordinary negating particle ne nye not is used in addition to the negative pronoun nikogo nikovo nobody Italian behaves in a similar way Non ti vede nessuno nobody can see you although Nessuno ti vede is also a possible clause with exactly the same meaning The negative in other languages Edit Russian Edit In Russian all of the elements not never nobody nowhere would appear together in the sentence in their negative form Italian Edit In Italian a clause works much as in Russian but non does not have to be there and can be there only before the verb if it precedes all other negative elements Tu non porti mai nessuno da nessuna parte Nobody ever brings you anything here however could be translated Nessuno qui ti porta mai niente or Qui non ti porta mai niente nessuno French Edit In French where simple negation is performed using ne pas see above specialized negatives appear in combination with the first particle ne but pas is omitted 10 a Je ne bois jamais I never drink b Je ne vois personne I see nobody c Je n ai jamais vu personne I have never seen anybody dd Ancient Greek Edit In Ancient Greek a simple negative oὐ ou not or mh mḗ not modal following another simple or compound negative e g oὐdeis oudeis nobody results in an affirmation whereas a compound negative following a simple or compound negative strengthens the negation oὐdeὶs oὐk ἔpasxe ti oudeis ouk epaskhe ti nobody was not suffering something i e everybody was suffering mὴ 8orybhsῃ mhdeis mḕ thorubḗsei medeis let not nobody raise an uproar meaning let nobody raise an uproar Dagaare Edit In Dagaare negation is marked specifically by pre verb particles where only four out of the nearly 24 pre verb particles are designated as negation markers 11 The four negation markers are ba kʊ ŋ ta and tɔ ɔ 11 To signal negation as well as other semantic relation these negation particles combine with different aspects of the verb 11 These pre verb negatory particles can also be used to convey tense mood aspect and polarity negation and in some cases can be used to convey more than one of these features 11 For example the negation marker ta can be used to indicate polarity and mood Ta zo Do not run indicates negative imperative constructionFor example the negation marker ba can be used as a non future or present tense negative marker a mɔnaabʊ ba kʊ a naŋkpaana The buffalo has not killed the hunter has ba used with the perfective A and imperfective A forms of the verb to indicate negation in the present tenseSign Languages Edit Various signed and manual languages are known to negate via headshake 12 Affirmative and negative responses EditMain article Yes and no Special affirmative and negative words particles are often found in responses to questions and sometimes to other assertions by way of agreement or disagreement In English these are yes and no respectively in French oui si and non in Swedish ja jo and nej in Spanish si and no and so on Not all languages make such common use of particles of this type in some such as Welsh it is more common to repeat the verb or another part of the predicate with or without negation accordingly Complications sometimes arise in the case of responses to negative statements or questions in some cases the response that confirms a negative statement is the negative particle as in English You re not going out No but in some languages this is reversed Some languages have a distinct form to answer a negative question such as French si and Swedish jo these serve to contradict the negative statement suggested by the first speaker See also EditDe Interpretatione Jespersen s Cycle Not Polarity item VeridicalityReferences Edit a b Spychalska Maria Kontinen Jarmo Werning Markus 2016 04 29 Investigating scalar implicatures in a truth value judgement task evidence from event related brain potentials Language Cognition and Neuroscience 31 6 817 840 doi 10 1080 23273798 2016 1161806 ISSN 2327 3798 S2CID 124648175 Jordan Michael P 1998 The power of negation in English Text context and relevance Journal of Pragmatics 29 6 705 752 doi 10 1016 S0378 2166 97 00086 6 Liu Bo Wang Huili Beltran David Gu Beixian Liang Tengfei Wang Xiaoshuang de Vega Manuel 2019 09 05 The generalizability of inhibition related processes in the comprehension of linguistic negation ERP evidence from the Mandarin language Language Cognition and Neuroscience 35 7 885 895 doi 10 1080 23273798 2019 1662460 ISSN 2327 3798 S2CID 203052216 a b c d e Giannakidou Anastasia 2011 Negative and Positive Polarity Items PDF The University of Chicago a b c d e f Giora Rachel July 2006 Anything negatives can do affirmatives can do just as well except for some metaphors Journal of Pragmatics 38 7 981 1014 doi 10 1016 j pragma 2005 12 006 ISSN 0378 2166 Ali M Grimm S Bodomo A 2021 A dictionary and grammatical sketch of Dagaare Vol 4 Language Science Press doi 10 5281 zenodo 5154710 a b Mwinlaaru Isaac N Yap Foong Ha November 2017 A tale of two distal demonstratives in Dagaare Reflections on directionality principles in grammaticalisation Language Sciences 64 130 151 doi 10 1016 j langsci 2017 07 005 hdl 10397 73178 ISSN 0388 0001 S2CID 148942057 Zwicky Arnold M Pullum Geoffrey K 1983 Cliticization vs Inflection English n t PDF Language Linguistic Society of America 59 3 502 513 doi 10 2307 413900 JSTOR 413900 The linguist D Biber refers to two types of negation synthetic no neither or nor negation and analytic not negation For example He is neither here nor there synthetic or He is not here analytic Bross Fabian 2020 The why how alternation and a new test for sentential negation on negated how questions Glossa A Journal of General Linguistics 5 doi 10 5334 gjgl 1175 a b c d Saanchi James Angkaaraba Negation In Dagaare Legon Journal of the Humanities 19 via African Journals Online AJOL Linguistics in Amsterdam www linguisticsinamsterdam nl Retrieved 2022 11 04 Further reading EditLaurence R Horn A Natural History of Negation 2001 ISBN 978 1 57586 336 8 Douglas Biber Susan Conrad Randi Reppen Corpus Linguistics Investigating Language Structure and Use 1998 ISBN 0 521 49957 7 Tettamanti Marco Manenti Rosa Della Rosa Pasquale A Falini Andrea Perani Daniela Cappa Stefano F Moro Andrea 2008 Negation in the brain Modulating action representation NeuroImage 43 2 358 367 doi 10 1016 j neuroimage 2008 08 004 PMID 18771737 S2CID 17658822 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Affirmation and negation amp oldid 1128341040, wikipedia, wiki, 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