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OK, but not Is there my jumper?Interrogative: Is there a jumper?
OK, but not Is there my jumper?Interrogative: Is there a jumper?
OK, but not Is there my jumper?
Now that you have repeated that I understand the meaning of those lines.
Let me ask again. I still think that a sentence like "Is my jumper there?" can exist and can be meaningful. Imagine that you are guessing that your jumper is in a washing machine but you want to make sure and so you are asking someone "Is my jumper there?".If you're talking pure syntactics only, then yes, that's the transformation. My point, however, was that it's not possible to make such a transformation in real language since there's no actual propositional content. The utterance in real language is a way to show that you've just identified the location of your lost jumper. You can't really make a question out of that as it doesn't make sense. The closest you can get is something like:
I got the point now. Thank you.No one said that "Is my jumper there?" was impossible.
Let me ask again. I still think that a sentence like "Is my jumper there?" can exist and can be meaningful. Imagine that you are guessing that your jumper is in a washing machine but you want to make sure and so you are asking someone "Is my jumper there?".
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