International audienceThis paper studies why, for a plurality of discrete entities, a non-count plural might be preferred over a count noun or a non-count singular. Building partly on Wierzbicka (1985, 1988), it proposes two parameters: semantics, but also morphology. With lexical plurals, the items are construed as being of different kinds (vs. count nouns) and the focus is on the plurality of items rather than on a common purpose (vs. non-count singulars). For morphology, the notion of ‘attractor’ is proposed for some patterns which partly motivate the [+/-count] and number features. A collateral finding is that the plural of lexical plurals can be unstable: some nouns ending with -s undergo reanalysis as morphological plurals, while Lati...
Words that function as the subjects of verbs, objects of verbs or prepositions and which can have a ...
International audienceThe grammatical tradition has excluded lexical plurals from the category of co...
Plural morphology exhibits differing interpretations across languages. For example, in downward enta...
International audienceThis paper studies why, for a plurality of discrete entities, a non-count plur...
International audienceThis paper studies why, for a plurality of discrete entities, a non-count plur...
This paper addresses the semantics and pragmatics of singular and plural nominals in languages that ...
It is true that, as is well known since Allan (1980), mass and count are best seen as preferences r...
Discuss the types of count nouns and corresponding constructions in classifier and non-classifier la...
Distributional semantics offers new ways to study the semantics of morphology. This study focuses on...
This article describes Cyclic Morphology, a theory of morphological generation that falls into the c...
Research on the semantics of number has been strongly influenced by the distri-bution of overt numbe...
Abstract- Most research on the English plural has concentrated on children's acquisition of mor...
The lexicalization process of nouns in the plural form shows the difference of lexical meaning betwe...
This paper explores the hypothesis of a semantics for plurals with no atomic partial order defined o...
The lexicalization process of nouns in the plural form shows the difference of lexical meaning betwe...
Words that function as the subjects of verbs, objects of verbs or prepositions and which can have a ...
International audienceThe grammatical tradition has excluded lexical plurals from the category of co...
Plural morphology exhibits differing interpretations across languages. For example, in downward enta...
International audienceThis paper studies why, for a plurality of discrete entities, a non-count plur...
International audienceThis paper studies why, for a plurality of discrete entities, a non-count plur...
This paper addresses the semantics and pragmatics of singular and plural nominals in languages that ...
It is true that, as is well known since Allan (1980), mass and count are best seen as preferences r...
Discuss the types of count nouns and corresponding constructions in classifier and non-classifier la...
Distributional semantics offers new ways to study the semantics of morphology. This study focuses on...
This article describes Cyclic Morphology, a theory of morphological generation that falls into the c...
Research on the semantics of number has been strongly influenced by the distri-bution of overt numbe...
Abstract- Most research on the English plural has concentrated on children's acquisition of mor...
The lexicalization process of nouns in the plural form shows the difference of lexical meaning betwe...
This paper explores the hypothesis of a semantics for plurals with no atomic partial order defined o...
The lexicalization process of nouns in the plural form shows the difference of lexical meaning betwe...
Words that function as the subjects of verbs, objects of verbs or prepositions and which can have a ...
International audienceThe grammatical tradition has excluded lexical plurals from the category of co...
Plural morphology exhibits differing interpretations across languages. For example, in downward enta...