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E-raamat: Theory of Distributed Number

(University of Ottawa), (University of Ottawa)
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"The objective of this book is to develop a deeper understanding of the form and interpretation of number. Using insights from Generative syntax and Distributed Morphology, we develop a theory of distributed number, arguing that number can be associated with several functional heads and that these projections exist depending on the features they specify. In doing so, we make a strong claim for a close mapping between the syntactic structure and the semantics in the noun phrase, since each node corresponds to a different interpretation of number. Despite some technical implementations, the book is accessible to linguists working outside any particular syntax-semantic framework, since we propose generalizations that are applicable in many, if not all, models of grammar. The book focuses on Arabic, but also discusses a number of languages including English, French, Ojibwe, Blackfoot, Hebrew, Japanese, Korean, Chinese, Turkish, Persian, and Western Armenian"--

The objective of this book is to develop a deeper understanding of the form and interpretation of number. Using insights from Generative syntax and Distributed Morphology, we develop a theory of distributed number, arguing that number can be associated with several functional heads and that these projections exist depending on the features they specify. In doing so, we make a strong claim for a close mapping between the syntactic structure and the semantics in the noun phrase, since each node corresponds to a different interpretation of number. Despite some technical implementations, the book is accessible to linguists working outside any particular syntax-semantic framework, since we propose generalizations that are applicable in many, if not all, models of grammar. The book focuses on Arabic, but also discusses a number of languages including English, French, Ojibwe, Blackfoot, Hebrew, Japanese, Korean, Chinese, Turkish, Persian, and Western Armenian.
List of tables vii
Preface ix
Abbreviations xi
Chapter 1 Introduction 1(26)
1.1 Goal
1(2)
1.2 Theoretical assumptions
3(7)
1.3 Paucity
10(1)
1.4 Clusivity
11(5)
1.5 Research questions and hypotheses
16(8)
1.6 Overview of the book
24(3)
Chapter 2 The nP domain 27(12)
2.1 Introduction
27(1)
2.2 Collectives
27(7)
2.3 Bare nouns
34(1)
2.4 Lexical plurals
35(2)
2.5 Conclusion
37(2)
Chapter 3 The lower NumP domain 39(22)
3.1 Introduction
39(1)
3.2 Singulars
39(2)
3.3 Singulatives
41(6)
3.4 Plurals
47(1)
3.4.1 The sound plural
48(1)
3.4.2 The broken plural
49(8)
3.4.3 Sound plurals and broken plurals are on Num
57(2)
3.5 Duals
59(1)
3.6 Conclusion
60(1)
Chapter 4 The higher NumP domain 61(18)
4.1 Introduction
61(2)
4.2 Plural of the singulative
63(7)
4.3 Contrasting plurals
70(8)
4.4 Conclusion
78(1)
Chapter 5 Broken plurals and interpretation 79(24)
5.1 Introduction
79(1)
5.2 Agreement mismatches in Arabic: A puzzle
79(4)
5.3 Zabbal (2002)
83(3)
5.4 Broken plurals are hybrid nouns
86(15)
5.5 Conclusion
101(2)
Chapter 6 Bare plurals 103(10)
6.1 Introduction
103(1)
6.2 General number and plurality: A puzzle
104(2)
6.3 Atomization and renominalization
106(5)
6.4 Conclusion
111(2)
Chapter 7 Number and diachrony 113(24)
7.1 Introduction
113(3)
7.2 Distributed Morphology and diachrony
116(5)
7.3 The analysis
121(14)
7.4 Conclusion
135(2)
Chapter 8 Conclusions 137(2)
Bibliography 139(12)
Index 151