This introduction to this issue outlines the main issues concerning nominal classification within a typological perspective and gives a short overview of the problems discussed in the contributions to the issue. These nclude: typology of multiple classifier systems; languages with several coexisting classifier types; noun class agreement on multiple targets; semantics, development and obsolescence of classifiers; and their semantic and discourse functions
The entrenched nature of the gender/classifier dichotomy stands in the way of better typologies of n...
Grammatical means for the linguistic categorization of noun referents are found in just about every ...
International audienceClassifiers, both nominal and verbal, must be taken into consideration as a pa...
This handbook chapter summarizes some of the problems of nominal classification in language, present...
This talk first discusses briefly the basic problem of how the perceived world is expressed and repr...
This book addresses the fundamental linguistic question of how the perceived world is expressed thro...
Almost all languages of the world have nominal classification devices in their grammar. The most wid...
This paper provides an analysis of nominal classification systems, focussing on the grammaticalizati...
International audienceClassifiers and noun class markers are often semantically general and semantic...
Some languages have both gender and classifiers, contrary to what was once believed possible. We use...
The Papuan language Mian allows us to refine the typology of nominal classification. Mian has two ca...
There are two ways for a language to classify its nouns: either by means of classifiers, which speci...
Classifiers and noun classes are basic kinds of noun categorization devices. They fall into several ...
A noun may refer to a man, a woman, an animal, or an inanimate object of varied shape, size, and fun...
Discussion of nominalization (NZN) is possible only within a general theory of grammatical categorie...
The entrenched nature of the gender/classifier dichotomy stands in the way of better typologies of n...
Grammatical means for the linguistic categorization of noun referents are found in just about every ...
International audienceClassifiers, both nominal and verbal, must be taken into consideration as a pa...
This handbook chapter summarizes some of the problems of nominal classification in language, present...
This talk first discusses briefly the basic problem of how the perceived world is expressed and repr...
This book addresses the fundamental linguistic question of how the perceived world is expressed thro...
Almost all languages of the world have nominal classification devices in their grammar. The most wid...
This paper provides an analysis of nominal classification systems, focussing on the grammaticalizati...
International audienceClassifiers and noun class markers are often semantically general and semantic...
Some languages have both gender and classifiers, contrary to what was once believed possible. We use...
The Papuan language Mian allows us to refine the typology of nominal classification. Mian has two ca...
There are two ways for a language to classify its nouns: either by means of classifiers, which speci...
Classifiers and noun classes are basic kinds of noun categorization devices. They fall into several ...
A noun may refer to a man, a woman, an animal, or an inanimate object of varied shape, size, and fun...
Discussion of nominalization (NZN) is possible only within a general theory of grammatical categorie...
The entrenched nature of the gender/classifier dichotomy stands in the way of better typologies of n...
Grammatical means for the linguistic categorization of noun referents are found in just about every ...
International audienceClassifiers, both nominal and verbal, must be taken into consideration as a pa...