Many linguists have pointed out a correspondence between the mass-count distinction in the nominal domain and the aspectual classification in the verbal domain. An analogy is made between atelic verbal predicates and mass nouns on the one hand, and telic verbal predicates and count nouns on the other hand, based upon the form of quantification and the (un)boundedness of the denotation (cf. Jackendoff 1991). To draw such a parallel between the verbal and nominal domains, verbal predications are related to their nominalizations, assuming that there is a direct semantic correspondence between them (cf. Mourelatos 1978). In this study, I further investigate the issue of aspectual inheritance in nominalizations, and the correlation between the m...
The aim of this thesis is to examine the morphosyntactic and semantic properties of abstract nouns r...
Abstract: In many languages, common nouns are divided into two morpho-syntactic subclasses, count no...
Abstract:In many languages, common nouns are divided into two morpho-syntactic subclasses, count nou...
Many linguists have pointed out a correspondence between the mass-count distinction in the nominal d...
De nombreux linguistes font un parallèle entre la distinction massif/comptable dans le domaine nomin...
In this work, we examine the factors allowing or disallowing French Complex Event Nominals (CENs, i....
This paper examines the properties of nouns that are morphologically related to activity verbs (N-Va...
International audienceThis article deals with the pluralisation of complex event nominals in French....
The lexico-grammatical status of mass and count nouns has been extensively debated over the last dec...
A comparative study of the mass/count distinction in four languages (French, English, Hebrew and Hai...
This dissertation contains three studies, which explore various questions about verbal aspect and h...
have shown that the telicity feature of a clause is derived from the similar features of its constit...
In many languages, common nouns are divided into two morpho-syntactic subclasses, count nouns and ma...
The aim of this thesis is to examine the morphosyntactic and semantic properties of abstract nouns r...
This paper studies the notion of aspect within the nominal phrase in English. Dik (1997) and Van Val...
The aim of this thesis is to examine the morphosyntactic and semantic properties of abstract nouns r...
Abstract: In many languages, common nouns are divided into two morpho-syntactic subclasses, count no...
Abstract:In many languages, common nouns are divided into two morpho-syntactic subclasses, count nou...
Many linguists have pointed out a correspondence between the mass-count distinction in the nominal d...
De nombreux linguistes font un parallèle entre la distinction massif/comptable dans le domaine nomin...
In this work, we examine the factors allowing or disallowing French Complex Event Nominals (CENs, i....
This paper examines the properties of nouns that are morphologically related to activity verbs (N-Va...
International audienceThis article deals with the pluralisation of complex event nominals in French....
The lexico-grammatical status of mass and count nouns has been extensively debated over the last dec...
A comparative study of the mass/count distinction in four languages (French, English, Hebrew and Hai...
This dissertation contains three studies, which explore various questions about verbal aspect and h...
have shown that the telicity feature of a clause is derived from the similar features of its constit...
In many languages, common nouns are divided into two morpho-syntactic subclasses, count nouns and ma...
The aim of this thesis is to examine the morphosyntactic and semantic properties of abstract nouns r...
This paper studies the notion of aspect within the nominal phrase in English. Dik (1997) and Van Val...
The aim of this thesis is to examine the morphosyntactic and semantic properties of abstract nouns r...
Abstract: In many languages, common nouns are divided into two morpho-syntactic subclasses, count no...
Abstract:In many languages, common nouns are divided into two morpho-syntactic subclasses, count nou...