International audienceCount nouns are a morphosyntactic subclass of common nouns (Gillon 1992). They can be used with the determiners "one" and "several", but not with "much" and "little"; they admit singular and plural number. Count nouns apply to individuals of extremely diverse types. Thus the question we address in this paper: is there anything characteristic to the meanings of count nouns? It is comparable in intent to: can one give a purely semantic definition of verbs? Four proposals have been discussed in the literature: proposals involving internal structure, atomic reference, boundedness and countability. We consider them in turn. Our strategy will be to show that these are not necessary conditions for a common noun to be a count ...
This paper considers the category of countability as a category established on the lexical meaning o...
This paper makes two central claims. The first is that there is an intimate and non-trivial relation...
Whereas linguists often distinguish count and non-count nouns, philosophers more commonly distinguis...
International audienceCount nouns are a morphosyntactic subclass of common nouns (Gillon 1992). They...
Words that function as the subjects of verbs, objects of verbs or prepositions and which can have a ...
This paper offers an account of the semantics of count nous. I show that neither the atomic/non-atom...
Discuss the types of count nouns and corresponding constructions in classifier and non-classifier la...
The issue of what is usually, but also misleadingly called the count-mass distinction, i.e. the dist...
I present a high-level account of the semantical distinction between count nouns and non-count nouns...
The mass-count distinction is a morpho-syntactic distinction among nouns that is generally taken to ...
There is an emerging view according to which countability is not an integral part of the lexical mea...
The issue of countability and uncountability of English nouns may seem simple – nouns are count when...
To what extent are countability distinctions subject to systematic semantic variation? Could there b...
How are count nouns, mass nouns, plurals, classifiers, and measure nouns interpreted in natural lang...
Nouns can be divided into so-called count nouns and mass nouns. Count nouns refer to entities which ...
This paper considers the category of countability as a category established on the lexical meaning o...
This paper makes two central claims. The first is that there is an intimate and non-trivial relation...
Whereas linguists often distinguish count and non-count nouns, philosophers more commonly distinguis...
International audienceCount nouns are a morphosyntactic subclass of common nouns (Gillon 1992). They...
Words that function as the subjects of verbs, objects of verbs or prepositions and which can have a ...
This paper offers an account of the semantics of count nous. I show that neither the atomic/non-atom...
Discuss the types of count nouns and corresponding constructions in classifier and non-classifier la...
The issue of what is usually, but also misleadingly called the count-mass distinction, i.e. the dist...
I present a high-level account of the semantical distinction between count nouns and non-count nouns...
The mass-count distinction is a morpho-syntactic distinction among nouns that is generally taken to ...
There is an emerging view according to which countability is not an integral part of the lexical mea...
The issue of countability and uncountability of English nouns may seem simple – nouns are count when...
To what extent are countability distinctions subject to systematic semantic variation? Could there b...
How are count nouns, mass nouns, plurals, classifiers, and measure nouns interpreted in natural lang...
Nouns can be divided into so-called count nouns and mass nouns. Count nouns refer to entities which ...
This paper considers the category of countability as a category established on the lexical meaning o...
This paper makes two central claims. The first is that there is an intimate and non-trivial relation...
Whereas linguists often distinguish count and non-count nouns, philosophers more commonly distinguis...