Collective nouns are a category of nouns that refer to a group of people or things. This group of nouns has the special characteristic that when in singular form, they can be followed by either a singular or a plural verb. This feature of collective nouns has attracted a great deal of attention from researchers and traditional grammarians, who in the last few decades have tried to explain this phenomenon by investigating different perspectives on it, thereby taking into consideration morphological, syntactic and semantic, as well as variational and discourse-specific differences (Biber et al, 1999; Levin, 2001; Depraetere, 2003). One of the main assumptions that has been suggested in the literature is that collective nouns have specific con...
The overall aim of the present study is to investigate syntactic variation in certain Present-day En...
International audienceThis monograph proposes a comparative approach to all the ways of denoting ‘mo...
In the semantics of human collective nouns there are two mechanisms at work, leading to distinct typ...
Collective nouns are a category of nouns that refer to a group of people or things. This group of no...
International audienceThe article aims to find out whether verbal concord with collective nouns (e.g...
The basic purpose of this study is to describe agreement with collective nouns in American, British,...
International audienceThe grammatical tradition has excluded lexical plurals from the category of co...
This thesis concerns agreement with collective nouns in American, British and Australian English. It...
This paper has presented the results of our analysis of number agreement with collective noun subjec...
A chapter written for the upcoming Oxford Handbook of Grammatical Number (eds. Patricia Cabredo Hofh...
This corpus-based study analyses the number mismatches found in English collective noun-based subje...
This thesis is focused on the issue of collective nouns in current English. The theoretical part is ...
The purpose of this thesis is to investigate how Swedes writing in English construct number concord ...
Distributional semantics offers new ways to study the semantics of morphology. This study focuses on...
This corpus-based study reports on both a quantitative and qualitative account of the use of collect...
The overall aim of the present study is to investigate syntactic variation in certain Present-day En...
International audienceThis monograph proposes a comparative approach to all the ways of denoting ‘mo...
In the semantics of human collective nouns there are two mechanisms at work, leading to distinct typ...
Collective nouns are a category of nouns that refer to a group of people or things. This group of no...
International audienceThe article aims to find out whether verbal concord with collective nouns (e.g...
The basic purpose of this study is to describe agreement with collective nouns in American, British,...
International audienceThe grammatical tradition has excluded lexical plurals from the category of co...
This thesis concerns agreement with collective nouns in American, British and Australian English. It...
This paper has presented the results of our analysis of number agreement with collective noun subjec...
A chapter written for the upcoming Oxford Handbook of Grammatical Number (eds. Patricia Cabredo Hofh...
This corpus-based study analyses the number mismatches found in English collective noun-based subje...
This thesis is focused on the issue of collective nouns in current English. The theoretical part is ...
The purpose of this thesis is to investigate how Swedes writing in English construct number concord ...
Distributional semantics offers new ways to study the semantics of morphology. This study focuses on...
This corpus-based study reports on both a quantitative and qualitative account of the use of collect...
The overall aim of the present study is to investigate syntactic variation in certain Present-day En...
International audienceThis monograph proposes a comparative approach to all the ways of denoting ‘mo...
In the semantics of human collective nouns there are two mechanisms at work, leading to distinct typ...