Type shifter
In formal semantics, a type shifter is an interpretation rule that changes an expression's semantic type. For instance, the English expression "John" might ordinarily denote John himself, but a type shifting rule called can raise its denotation to a function which takes a property and returns "true" if John himself has that property. Lift can be seen as mapping an individual onto the principal ultrafilter that it generates.
- Without type shifting:
- Type shifting with :
Type shifters remain a standard tool in formal semantic work, particularly in categorial grammar and related frameworks. Type shifters have also been used to interpret quantifiers in object position and to capture scope ambiguities. In that regard, they serve as an alternative to syntactic operations such as quantifier raising used in mainstream generative approaches to semantics. Type shifters have also been used to generate and compose alternative sets without the need to fully adopt an alternative-based semantics.