E-Book, Englisch, 331 Seiten
Reihe: ISSN
E-Book, Englisch, 331 Seiten
Reihe: ISSN
ISBN: 978-3-11-030499-2
Verlag: De Gruyter
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
Zielgruppe
Academic Libraries; University and College Teachers and Institute Researchers, including Graduate Students, especially in Linguistics and Chinese or East Asian Language Departments
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
1;Acknowledgments;11
2;Abbreviations;12
3;Chapter 1: Introduction;13
4;Chapter 2: Classifiers and countability;18
4.1;2.1. Introduction;18
4.2;2.2. Decomposing countability;19
4.2.1;2.2.1. Identifying two new features syntagmatically;19
4.2.2;2.2.2. Defining count and mass by the two features;27
4.2.3;2.2.3. Attesting the two features in co-occurrence restrictions;28
4.2.4;2.2.4. Attesting the two features in pronominalization;30
4.2.5;2.2.5. Attesting the two features in shifts;32
4.2.6;2.2.6. Numerability and number;37
4.3;2.3. The two features in nouns;41
4.3.1;2.3.1. Numerability of nouns;41
4.3.2;2.3.2. Delimitability of nouns;47
4.4;2.4. The two features in unit words;48
4.4.1;2.4.1. CLs and measure words;48
4.4.2;2.4.2. Unit words that occur with [-Delimitable];50
4.4.3;2.4.3. Unit words that occur with [+Delimitable];51
4.4.4;2.4.4. Unit words that occur with [±Delimitable];55
4.4.5;2.4.5. The CL ge;58
4.4.6;2.4.6. Unit words as unique Numerability bearers in Chinese;61
4.4.7;2.4.7. Delimitability of unit words;62
4.5;2.5. Reflections on the studies of countability;64
4.5.1;2.5.1. What’s new?;64
4.5.2;2.5.2. The semantic approach to countability;68
4.5.3;2.5.3. The morphological approach to countability;70
4.5.4;2.5.4. The multi-criteria approach to countability;73
4.5.5;2.5.5. Other non-binary analyses of countability;73
4.5.6;2.5.6. Experimental perspective;77
4.6;2.6. Reflections on the studies of CLs in numeral expressions;78
4.6.1;2.6.1. The syntactic foundations of the presence of CLs;78
4.6.2;2.6.2. How special are the CLs of CL languages?;79
4.6.3;2.6.3. The sortal-mensural contrast and CLs that do not classify;82
4.6.4;2.6.4. The unreliability of the de and pre-CL adjective arguments;90
4.6.5;2.6.5. Experimental perspective;93
4.7;2.7. Chapter summary;95
5;Chapter 3: Classifiers and quantifiers;96
5.1;3.1. Introduction;96
5.2;3.2. Quantifiers that occur with a unit word;97
5.3;3.3. Quantifiers that occur without a unit word;99
5.4;3.4. The ambiguous cases;103
5.5;3.5. Non-numeral uses of yi ‘one’ in nominals;105
5.5.1;3.5.1. G-YI: Yi as a generic quantifier;105
5.5.2;3.5.2. E-YI: Yi as an existential quantifier;107
5.5.3;3.5.3. M-YI: Yi as a maximal quantifier;113
5.6;3.6. Chapter summary;118
6;Chapter 4: Classifiers and plurality;120
6.1;4.1. Introduction;120
6.1.1;4.1.1. Number in Mandarin Chinese?;120
6.1.2;4.1.2. General number and optional number marking;123
6.1.3;4.1.3. Abundant plural;125
6.2;4.2. Unit plurality;127
6.2.1;4.2.1. RUWs as unit-plurality markers;127
6.2.2;4.2.2. The productivity;129
6.2.3;4.2.3. RUWs, E-YI, and distributivity;132
6.2.4;4.2.4. Definiteness and specificity of RUW nominals;141
6.2.5;4.2.5. The interactions of numerals and number markers;142
6.3;4.3. Unit singularity;147
6.3.1;4.3.1. SUWs as unit-singularity markers;147
6.3.2;4.3.2. The productivity;149
6.3.3;4.3.3. The problems of the numeral-deletion analysis;152
6.3.4;4.3.4. Definiteness and specificity of SUW nominals;156
6.4;4.4. Morphological and semantic markedness;159
6.5;4.5. Number marking in CL languages;162
6.6;4.6. Chapter summary;166
7;Chapter 5: The syntactic constituency of numeral expressions;167
7.1;5.1. Introduction;167
7.2;5.2. Four arguments for the non-unified analysis;169
7.2.1;5.2.1. The scope of a left-peripheral modifier;169
7.2.2;5.2.2. The effect of modifier-association;172
7.2.3;5.2.3. Semantic selection;175
7.2.4;5.2.4. The order of size and shape modifiers;179
7.2.5;5.2.5. Two possible structures;182
7.3;5.3. Invalid arguments;184
7.3.1;5.3.1. The adjacency of a numeral and a unit word;184
7.3.2;5.3.2. Syntactic operations on NPs;186
7.3.3;5.3.3. NP ellipsis;189
7.3.4;5.3.4. The positions of the partitives duo ‘more’ and ban ‘half’;189
7.3.5;5.3.5. Other invalid arguments;197
7.4;5.4. Constituency and the readings of numeral expressions;198
7.4.1;5.4.1. Count and measure;199
7.4.2;5.4.2. Individual and quantity;203
7.4.3;5.4.3. Definiteness and specificity;204
7.5;5.5. Constituency and the occurrence of de following a unit word;206
7.5.1;5.5.1. Background;206
7.5.2;5.5.2. The quantity-reading condition;207
7.5.3;5.5.3. Different sources of de;212
7.6;5.6. Chapter summary;217
8;Chapter 6: The syntactic positions of classifiers;219
8.1;6.1. Introduction;219
8.2;6.2. The projection of UnitP;220
8.2.1;6.2.1. Unit words in numeral expressions and the head of UnitP;220
8.2.2;6.2.2. The Spec-Head relation of a numeral and a unit word;225
8.2.3;6.2.3. The surface position of numerals and QuantP;229
8.3;6.3. The co-occurrence of QuantP, UnitP, and NumP;233
8.4;6.4. The morphosyntactic properties of pre-unit-word adjectives;239
8.5;6.5. The right- and left-branching numeral constructions;244
8.5.1;6.5.1. The representations of the right-branching structure;244
8.5.2;6.5.2. The representation of the left-branching structure;245
8.5.3;6.5.3. MonP and de;250
8.6;6.6. The structure of attributive numeral expressions;255
8.7;6.7. Various realizations of the head of UnitP;258
8.7.1;6.7.1. Major typological patterns of the null Unit;258
8.7.2;6.7.2. A comparison with numeral-oriented approaches;263
8.8;6.8. Chapter summary;266
9;Chapter 7: Noun-classifier compounds;268
9.1;7.1. Introduction;268
9.2;7.2. Basic properties of N-CL compounds;269
9.2.1;7.2.1. The components of N-CL compounds;269
9.2.2;7.2.2. The distributions and readings of N-CL compounds;273
9.3;7.3. DelP and N-CL compounds;274
9.3.1;7.3.1. Compound-internal CL as a realization of Del;274
9.3.2;7.3.2. DelP and delimitable markers;277
9.4;7.4. The non-count status of N-CL compounds;278
9.5;7.5. The relations between the higher and the lower CLs;279
9.5.1;7.5.1. No multiple individuating;279
9.5.2;7.5.2. No multiple counting-units;280
9.5.3;7.5.3. The semantic interactions between the two CLs;281
9.6;7.6. The place-holder CLs;282
9.6.1;7.6.1. Ge as the higher CL;283
9.6.2;7.6.2. The CL copying constructions;284
9.6.3;7.6.3. The alternation possibility;286
9.6.4;7.6.4. The significance of place-holder CLs;288
9.7;7.7. The syntactic representations of N-CL numeral expressions;288
9.7.1;7.7.1. The constructions without a place-holder CL;288
9.7.2;7.7.2. The constructions with a place-holder CL;291
9.8;7.8. Chapter summary;294
10;Chapter 8: Conclusions;295
11;References;302
12;Subject index;327
13;Language index;330