Bare nouns and number in Dëne Sųłiné
نویسنده
چکیده
This paper documents the number-related properties of Dëne Sųłiné (Athapaskan). Dëne Sųłiné has neither number inflection nor numeral classifiers. Nouns are bare, occur as such in argument positions, and combine directly with numerals. With these traits, Dëne Sųłiné represents a type of language that is little considered in formal typologies of number and countability. The paper critiques one influential proposal, that of Chierchia (in: Rothstein (ed.) Events and grammar, 1998a; Natural Language Semantics 6: 339–405, 1998b), and presents an alternative number typology, which introduces variation in the semantics of numerals. It will be shown that bare nouns in Dëne Sųłiné can be mass or count. Hence, the difference between count and mass cannot be expressed in terms of number, as in Chierchia. Instead, I express it in terms of atomicity. Mass nouns have nonatomic denotations, bare count nouns have atomic denotations that comprise singularities and pluralities. I also propose that numerals contain a function that accesses the singularities in a noun’s denotation. Hence they are compatible with bare count nouns, but not with The data presented here are from fieldwork at Cold Lake First Nations, Alberta. I thank the community for allowing this research and all speakers for their generous help: Shirley Cardinal, Ernest Ennow, John Janvier, Cecilia Machatis, Nora Matchatis, Marlene Piche, Valerie Wood. Funding was provided by a Killam postdoctoral fellowship from the University of Alberta and SSHRC post-doctoral fellowship #756-2005-0324 (University of Victoria). I thank Manfred Krifka, Leslie Saxon, Sally Rice, Betsy Ritter, the audience at a research seminar presentation at UBC in February 2005, the audiences of SULA 3 and WSCLA 11, and especially Ed Cook, Hotze Rullmann, and two anonymous referees for helpful comments or discussion. I would also like to thank Antoine Tremblay and Aili You for the Mandarin examples. The usual disclaimers apply. A. Wilhelm (&) Department of Linguistics, University of Victoria, PO Box 3045, Victoria, BC, Canada V8W 3P4 e-mail: [email protected] 123 Nat Lang Semantics (2008) 16:39–68 DOI 10.1007/s11050-007-9024-9 Bare nouns and number in Dëne Sųłiné
منابع مشابه
Count and Mass Nouns in Dëne S né
Dëne S né (short: Dëne), an Athapaskan language of Northern Canada, does not have any number-related grammatical categories in the nominal domain. Word order is SOV; nominals are optional (Cook 2004, Rice & Saxon 2005). The language lacks articles, case markers, etc., so that when nominal constituents occur, they are often bare nouns. (1) shows bare noun subjects, objects, and postpositional ob...
متن کاملTwo Kinds of Definites in Classifier Languages
Contrary to most earlier claims in the literature, we demonstrate that crucial aspects of definiteness are overtly marked in classifier languages and follow recently established typological patterns of definiteness marking. Specifically, demonstrative descriptions are used for familiar definites while definite bare nouns are used only in contexts licensed by uniqueness. In classifier languages ...
متن کاملAgainst the Nominal Mapping Parameter : Bare nouns in Brazilian Portuguese
Chierchia 1998 proposes that languages vary in terms of what they allow their NPs to denote. This variation is encoded in a semantic parameter which determines whether NPs denote names of kinds (and are therefore argumental) [+arg, -pred], predicates (and therefore require a determiner to be in an argument position) [-arg, +pred] or either [+arg, +pred]. In this paper we argue using data from b...
متن کاملBare Singular Reference to Kinds
According to Chierchia 1998, languages where nouns are marked for number and definiteness are not expected to have bare singular nouns which denote kinds. Hebrew has such examples, so far unnoted, yet the present paper shows it can be accomodated within a semantic typology. I disagree with Schmitt and Munn 1999, who conclude on the basis of similar examples in Brazilian Portuguese that they ref...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
دوره شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2011