In:Negation Patterns in West African Languages and Beyond
Edited by Norbert Cyffer, Erwin Ebermann and Georg Ziegelmeyer
[Typological Studies in Language 87] 2009
► pp. 57–70
Quantification and polarity
Negative Adverbial Intensifiers (‘never ever’, ‘not at all’, etc.) in Hausa
Published online: 27 August 2009
https://doi.org/10.1075/tsl.87.04jag
https://doi.org/10.1075/tsl.87.04jag
Hausa has a typologically interesting but poorly understood set of quantifying time and
degree adverbs – equivalent to English 'never ever', 'not at
all', etc. – which behave as negative polarity items and enhance the pragmatic
impact of a negative utterance (both verbal and non-verbal). The functional distribution
of these adverbial intensifiers is unusual, however, in that some are
"bipolar", i.e., they can express opposite (minimal/maximal) values
according to whether they occur in negative or positive syntactic environments, with the
minimal intensifiers operating at the negative pole. An intensifier such as dà1ai, for
example, can mean either 'never' (negative) or
'always' (positive), and other modifiers, e.g., atàbau, can express
these same temporal meanings in addition to 'absolutely'. This paper
provides a unified account of this natural functional class of adverbs, and is seen as a
contribution to cross-linguistic research into polarity items and their licensing
contexts
