This paper presents a case study of the English noun amount, a word that ostensibly relies on measurement in its semantics, yet stands apart from other quantizing nouns on the basis of its EXISTENTIAL interpretation. John ate the apples that Bill ate does not mean John and Bill ate the same apples, but rather that they each ate apples in the same quantity. Amount makes reference to abstract representations of measurement, that is, to degrees. Its EXISTENTIAL interpretation evidences the fact that degrees contain information about the objects that instantiate them. Outside the domain of nominal measurement, the noun kind exhibits behavior strikingly similar to that of amount; both yield an EXISTENTIAL interpretation (Carlson 1977b). This obs...
In this paper I propose and formalize a theory of the mass-count distinction in which the denotation...
This paper offers a theory of degree multiplication in natural language semantics. Motivation for th...
This paper investigates the representation of mass and count nouns at the lexical-syntactic level, a...
This paper presents a case study of the English noun amount, a word that ostensibly relies on measur...
In the literature, considerable attention has gone to the degree modification of adjectives, as in v...
The adjectives of quantity (Q-adjectives) many, few, much and little stand out from other quantity e...
This paper makes two central claims. The first is that there is an intimate and non-trivial relation...
In studies of the emergence of intensifying meanings, the path from descriptive modification to degr...
Calculating Countability — A Corpus-Based, Mereological Study of the Count/Mass Distinction o...
Expressing quantity in English is an area replete with complexity, irregularity, fuzzy categories an...
Certain English quantificational expressions feature what appears to be an indefinite article, e.g. ...
Quantity judgment tasks have been increasingly used within and across languages as a diagnostic for ...
In this paper, I show that expressions like two glasses of wine are ambiguous between counting and m...
In this article, I discuss several inquiries into the meaning of expressions of quantity. It is to s...
Noun phrases with overt determiners, such as some apples or a quantity of milk, differ from bare nou...
In this paper I propose and formalize a theory of the mass-count distinction in which the denotation...
This paper offers a theory of degree multiplication in natural language semantics. Motivation for th...
This paper investigates the representation of mass and count nouns at the lexical-syntactic level, a...
This paper presents a case study of the English noun amount, a word that ostensibly relies on measur...
In the literature, considerable attention has gone to the degree modification of adjectives, as in v...
The adjectives of quantity (Q-adjectives) many, few, much and little stand out from other quantity e...
This paper makes two central claims. The first is that there is an intimate and non-trivial relation...
In studies of the emergence of intensifying meanings, the path from descriptive modification to degr...
Calculating Countability — A Corpus-Based, Mereological Study of the Count/Mass Distinction o...
Expressing quantity in English is an area replete with complexity, irregularity, fuzzy categories an...
Certain English quantificational expressions feature what appears to be an indefinite article, e.g. ...
Quantity judgment tasks have been increasingly used within and across languages as a diagnostic for ...
In this paper, I show that expressions like two glasses of wine are ambiguous between counting and m...
In this article, I discuss several inquiries into the meaning of expressions of quantity. It is to s...
Noun phrases with overt determiners, such as some apples or a quantity of milk, differ from bare nou...
In this paper I propose and formalize a theory of the mass-count distinction in which the denotation...
This paper offers a theory of degree multiplication in natural language semantics. Motivation for th...
This paper investigates the representation of mass and count nouns at the lexical-syntactic level, a...