This paper discusses a quantity word alternation in Ch’ol, a Mayan language of southern Mexico. Drawing on fieldwork and additional texts, I show that numerals, pejtyel ‘all,’ and oñ ‘many/much’ may appear with additional possessive morphology. I present evidence against a generalized quantifier analysis of these expressions and provide an analysis where the possessed quantity expressions are adjuncts co-indexed with a null pronoun. I also consider the alternation between oñ ‘many/much’ and its possessed form, meaning ‘most’. While the morphosyntactic distribution is similar, there are certain semantic reasons to not treat the ‘many’/‘most’ alternation in the same way as ‘all’ and the numerals. I suggest that the form corresponding to ‘mo...
This study is an attempt to observe the traditional forms and the use of quantity-indicating quantif...
This study is an attempt to observe the traditional forms and the use of quantity-indicating quanti...
This study considers two oddities of the syntax of Ancient Hebrew cardinal numerals: first, numerals...
This paper discusses a quantity word alternation in Ch’ol, a Mayan language of southern Mexico. Draw...
This dissertation is a theoretical and experimental investigation of number marking in Yucatec Maya,...
This dissertation is a theoretical and experimental investigation of number marking in Yucatec Maya,...
This thesis describes and analyzes the syntax and semantics of quantification in Kwak’wala, a Northe...
In addition to roots for familiar classes like verb, noun, and adjective, Mayan languages have a cla...
In this paper we address the issue of morphological plural marking in Spanish loanwords in Yucatec M...
Mochica, an extinct language of northern Peru, possesses an areally uncommon class of morphemes that...
In languages with numeral classifiers systems, nouns must appear with one of a series of classifiers...
This dissertation offers a refined account of person marking in Mocho’, a highly endangered Mayan la...
This article has two interlocked goals. The first is to highlight the strands of research that have ...
Learners of most languages are faced with the task of acquiring words to talk about number and quant...
In this squib, I present new data from possessive phrases in Chol (Mayan) and discuss the problem t...
This study is an attempt to observe the traditional forms and the use of quantity-indicating quantif...
This study is an attempt to observe the traditional forms and the use of quantity-indicating quanti...
This study considers two oddities of the syntax of Ancient Hebrew cardinal numerals: first, numerals...
This paper discusses a quantity word alternation in Ch’ol, a Mayan language of southern Mexico. Draw...
This dissertation is a theoretical and experimental investigation of number marking in Yucatec Maya,...
This dissertation is a theoretical and experimental investigation of number marking in Yucatec Maya,...
This thesis describes and analyzes the syntax and semantics of quantification in Kwak’wala, a Northe...
In addition to roots for familiar classes like verb, noun, and adjective, Mayan languages have a cla...
In this paper we address the issue of morphological plural marking in Spanish loanwords in Yucatec M...
Mochica, an extinct language of northern Peru, possesses an areally uncommon class of morphemes that...
In languages with numeral classifiers systems, nouns must appear with one of a series of classifiers...
This dissertation offers a refined account of person marking in Mocho’, a highly endangered Mayan la...
This article has two interlocked goals. The first is to highlight the strands of research that have ...
Learners of most languages are faced with the task of acquiring words to talk about number and quant...
In this squib, I present new data from possessive phrases in Chol (Mayan) and discuss the problem t...
This study is an attempt to observe the traditional forms and the use of quantity-indicating quantif...
This study is an attempt to observe the traditional forms and the use of quantity-indicating quanti...
This study considers two oddities of the syntax of Ancient Hebrew cardinal numerals: first, numerals...