Paul Kay (kay-p)
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Bibliography
Berlin, Brent and Kay, Paul, eds. 1969. Basic Color Terms: Their Universality and Evolution. Berkeley, California: University of California Press.
Kay, Paul. 1983. “What is the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis?” 8. Berkeley, California: Institute of Cognitive Studies, University of California, Berkeley.
Kay, Paul. 1989. “Contextual Operators: respective, respectively, and vice versa.” in BLS-15. Proceedings of the Fifteenth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society, edited by Kira Hall, Michael Meacham, and Richard Shapiro, pp. 181–192. University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, California: Berkeley Linguistics Society.
Kay, Paul. 1990. “Even.” Linguistics and Philosophy 13(1): 59–111.
Kay, Paul. 1992. “The Inheritance of Presuppositions.” Linguistics and Philosophy 15(4): 333–379.
Kay, Paul. 1995. Meaning of Words and Contextual Determination of Interpretation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Kay, Paul and Michaelis, Laura A. 2012. “Constructional Meaning and Compositionality.” in Semantics: An International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning. Volume 3, edited by Claudia Maienborn, Klaus von Heusinger, and Paul H. Portner, pp. 2271–2296. Handbooks of Linguistics and Communication Science n. 33.1. Berlin: de Gruyter Monton.
Regier, Terry, Kay, Paul, Gilbert, Aubrey and Ivry, Richard B. 2010. “Language and Thought: Which Side Are You On, Anyway?” in Words and the Mind: How Words Capture Human Experience, edited by Barbara C. Malt and Phillip Wolff, pp. 165–182. New York: Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195311129.001.0001.