This article discusses the syntax and semantics of Dutch pseudo-partitive constructions with measure nouns, such as drie liter water ‘three liters of water’. The major empirical puzzle is the distribution of two Dutch instances of many/much: veel and vele. Unlike earlier proposals, I analyze veel as a gradable adjective, and vele as a numeral. It turns out that in pseudo-partitives with pure measure readings, only vele can freely occur (veel liters water only allows a marked “liter-bottle” reading). This is puzzling, because veel is otherwise allowed both with mass and count terms, and both in the singular and in the plural. I adopt the more-or-less standard right-branching syntax for Dutch pseudo-partitives (providing some new arguments fo...
This study reports experimental data on the acquisition of the mass-count distinction by Dutch-speak...
We argue that Dutch does not behave according to Kratzer’s theory of fake indexicality. The crucial ...
Dutch features several morphemes with ‘privative’ uses (Cappelle et al. 2018) that allow the proposi...
This article discusses the syntax and semantics of Dutch pseudo-partitive constructions with measure...
This article discusses the syntax and semantics of Dutch pseudo-partitive constructions with measure...
The lexico-grammatical status of mass and count nouns has been extensively debated over the last dec...
This article takes a usage-based perspective on the partitive genitive construction in Dutch (iets m...
In this paper I propose and formalize a theory of the mass-count distinction in which the denotation...
SIZING UP COUNTABILITY: TOWARDS A MORE FINE-GRAINED MASS-COUNT DISTINCTION MARIJKE DE BELDER C...
The central topic of this thesis is microvariation in the syntax of nominal constructions in Dutch. ...
Dutch nominalised infinitives have been notoriously difficult to analyse, partly because they seem t...
This paper explores the previously undiscussed phenomenon of preposition doubling in Flemish Dutch d...
In this paper I propose and formalize a theory of the mass-count distinction in which the denotation...
UnrestrictedThe dissertation examines a form of construction known as pseudopartitives, focusing in ...
The main purpose of this paper is to present arguments for the existence of a certain relation betwe...
This study reports experimental data on the acquisition of the mass-count distinction by Dutch-speak...
We argue that Dutch does not behave according to Kratzer’s theory of fake indexicality. The crucial ...
Dutch features several morphemes with ‘privative’ uses (Cappelle et al. 2018) that allow the proposi...
This article discusses the syntax and semantics of Dutch pseudo-partitive constructions with measure...
This article discusses the syntax and semantics of Dutch pseudo-partitive constructions with measure...
The lexico-grammatical status of mass and count nouns has been extensively debated over the last dec...
This article takes a usage-based perspective on the partitive genitive construction in Dutch (iets m...
In this paper I propose and formalize a theory of the mass-count distinction in which the denotation...
SIZING UP COUNTABILITY: TOWARDS A MORE FINE-GRAINED MASS-COUNT DISTINCTION MARIJKE DE BELDER C...
The central topic of this thesis is microvariation in the syntax of nominal constructions in Dutch. ...
Dutch nominalised infinitives have been notoriously difficult to analyse, partly because they seem t...
This paper explores the previously undiscussed phenomenon of preposition doubling in Flemish Dutch d...
In this paper I propose and formalize a theory of the mass-count distinction in which the denotation...
UnrestrictedThe dissertation examines a form of construction known as pseudopartitives, focusing in ...
The main purpose of this paper is to present arguments for the existence of a certain relation betwe...
This study reports experimental data on the acquisition of the mass-count distinction by Dutch-speak...
We argue that Dutch does not behave according to Kratzer’s theory of fake indexicality. The crucial ...
Dutch features several morphemes with ‘privative’ uses (Cappelle et al. 2018) that allow the proposi...