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Mass and Count in Linguistics, Philosophy, and Cognitive Science [Kõva köide]

Edited by (CNRS)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 227 pages, kaal: 560 g
  • Sari: Language Faculty and Beyond 16
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Dec-2020
  • Kirjastus: John Benjamins Publishing Co
  • ISBN-10: 902720800X
  • ISBN-13: 9789027208002
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 227 pages, kaal: 560 g
  • Sari: Language Faculty and Beyond 16
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Dec-2020
  • Kirjastus: John Benjamins Publishing Co
  • ISBN-10: 902720800X
  • ISBN-13: 9789027208002
Teised raamatud teemal:
The mass-count distinction is a morpho-syntactic distinction among nouns that is generally taken to have semantic content. This content is generally taken to reflect a conceptual, cognitive, or ontological distinction and relates to philosophical and cognitive notions of unity, identity, and counting. The mass-count distinction is certainly one of the most interesting and puzzling topics in syntax and semantics that bears on ontology and cognitive science. In many ways, the topic remains under-researched, though, across languages and with respect to particular phenomena within a given language, with respect to its connection to cognition, and with respect to the way it may be understood ontologically. This volume aims to contribute to some of the gaps in the research on the topic, in particular the relation between the syntactic mass-count distinction and semantic and cognitive distinctions, diagnostics for mass and count, the distribution and role of numeral classifiers, abstract mass nouns, and object mass nouns (furniture, police force, clothing).The mass-count distinction is a morpho-syntactic distinction among nouns that is generally taken to have semantic content. This content is generally taken to reflect a conceptual, cognitive, or ontological distinction and relates to philosophical and cognitive notions of unity, identity, and counting. The mass-count distinction is certainly one of the most interesting and puzzling topics in syntax and semantics that bears on ontology and cognitive science. In many ways, the topic remains under-researched, though, across languages and with respect to particular phenomena within a given language, with respect to its connection to cognition, and with respect to the way it may be understood ontologically. This volume aims to contribute to some of the gaps in the research on the topic, in particular the relation between the syntactic mass-count distinction and semantic and cognitive distinctions, diagnostics for mass and count, the distribution and role of numeral classifiers, abstract mass nouns, and object mass nouns (furniture, police force, clothing).
Introduction x
Friederike Moltmann
Re-examining the mass-count distinction
13(24)
Alan Bale
Brendan Gillon
Activewear and other vaguery: A morphological perspective on aggregate-mass
37(24)
Dana Cohen
A comparison of abstract and concrete mass nouns in terms of their interaction with quantificational determiners
61(22)
Stefan Hinterwimmer
Can mass-count syntax be derived from semantics?
83(20)
Ritwik Kulkarni
Alessandro Treves
Susan Rothstein
Countability and grammatical number: An Aristotelian view and its challenges
103(38)
Almerindo E. Ojeda
Comparatives in Brazilian Portuguese: Counting and measuring
141(18)
Susan Rothstein
Roberta Pires de Oliveira
Lexical, syntactic, and pragmatic sources of countability: An experimental exploration of the mass-count distinction
159(32)
Mahesh Srinivasan
David Barner
Countability shifts and abstract nouns
191(34)
Roberto Zamparelli
Name Index 225(2)
Subject Index 227