Nouns can be divided into so-called count nouns and mass nouns. Count nouns refer to entities which present themselves naturally in discrete, countable units, while mass nouns refer to substances which do not present themselves in such units. In languages like English, count nouns can be counted by puttin
The distinction between count nouns and mass nouns affects thinking and writing about various types ...
This paper contributes to the growing body of work on countability properties of nouns across langua...
In languages with numeral classifiers systems, nouns must appear with one of a series of classifiers...
The purpose of this paper is to prove the Mass Noun Hypothesis wrong. The hypothesis claims that all...
Discuss the types of count nouns and corresponding constructions in classifier and non-classifier la...
Mass nouns relate to the world differently than count nouns. Mass nouns “divide their reference ” wh...
Words that function as the subjects of verbs, objects of verbs or prepositions and which can have a ...
People distinguish objects from the substances that constitute them. Many languages also distinguish...
This paper offers an account of the semantics of count nous. I show that neither the atomic/non-atom...
Research on mass nouns has focused on concrete terms. So, are there semantic properties shared by al...
How are count nouns, mass nouns, plurals, classifiers, and measure nouns interpreted in natural lang...
Research on mass nouns has focused on concrete terms. So, are there semantic properties shared by al...
The issue of countability and uncountability of English nouns may seem simple – nouns are count when...
By some accounts, speakers of classifier languages such as Mandarin or Japanese, which lack count-ma...
The issue of what is usually, but also misleadingly called the count-mass distinction, i.e. the dist...
The distinction between count nouns and mass nouns affects thinking and writing about various types ...
This paper contributes to the growing body of work on countability properties of nouns across langua...
In languages with numeral classifiers systems, nouns must appear with one of a series of classifiers...
The purpose of this paper is to prove the Mass Noun Hypothesis wrong. The hypothesis claims that all...
Discuss the types of count nouns and corresponding constructions in classifier and non-classifier la...
Mass nouns relate to the world differently than count nouns. Mass nouns “divide their reference ” wh...
Words that function as the subjects of verbs, objects of verbs or prepositions and which can have a ...
People distinguish objects from the substances that constitute them. Many languages also distinguish...
This paper offers an account of the semantics of count nous. I show that neither the atomic/non-atom...
Research on mass nouns has focused on concrete terms. So, are there semantic properties shared by al...
How are count nouns, mass nouns, plurals, classifiers, and measure nouns interpreted in natural lang...
Research on mass nouns has focused on concrete terms. So, are there semantic properties shared by al...
The issue of countability and uncountability of English nouns may seem simple – nouns are count when...
By some accounts, speakers of classifier languages such as Mandarin or Japanese, which lack count-ma...
The issue of what is usually, but also misleadingly called the count-mass distinction, i.e. the dist...
The distinction between count nouns and mass nouns affects thinking and writing about various types ...
This paper contributes to the growing body of work on countability properties of nouns across langua...
In languages with numeral classifiers systems, nouns must appear with one of a series of classifiers...