Questions put in the negative
Joel S. Berson
Berson at ATT.NET
Thu Mar 27 19:34:07 UTC 2008
At 3/27/2008 02:50 PM, Laurence Horn wrote:
>At 11:44 AM -0400 3/27/08, Joel S. Berson wrote:
>>For a moment, I thought I was in Japan ...
>>
>>At the supermarket yesterday, I was looking for 8-ounce packages of
>>smoked salmon, and found only the 4-ounce packages. I asked the man
>>at the seafood counter, which was around the corner, "You don't carry
>>the 8-ounce packages any more, do you?" When he replied "yes", I was
>>disappointed and started to wheel my cart away. But I heard his
>>voice behind me, saying "Come with me." He had emerged from behind
>>the counter to show me that the 8-ounce packages were available.
>>
>>Clearly I had very quickly, without any cogitation, assumed he meant
>>to agree with my hypothetical: "You don't carry them any more?";
>>"Yes, we don't carry them any more." He clearly meant "Yes, we do
>>have them still" -- perhaps an agreement with the second part of my
>>question, "do you?".
>>
>>My bad: two questions in one -- and one negative, one positive. If I
>>had asked only "Don't you carry the 8-ounce packages any more?" and
>>he had responded "Yes", I would at least have been uncertain! "Yes,
>>I agree with you, we don't", or "Yes, we do carry them"? -- and asked
>>for clarification. (If he had responded "No", I would have been sure
>>they didn't carry them.)
>And if he had responded "Si" in French, you wouldn't have started to
>wheel your cart away.
>
>LH
I would have gone with him to si. (Or told him to say "oui", not "si".)
Joel
------------------------------------------------------------
The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org
More information about the Ads-l
mailing list