Show Summary Details
- Title Pages
- General Preface
- The Contributors
- Abbreviations
-
1 The count mass distinction: Issues and perspectives -
2 Lexical nouns are both +MASS and +COUNT, but they are neither +MASS nor +COUNT -
3 Aspects of individuation* -
4 Collectives in the intersection of mass and count nouns: A cross‐linguistic account* -
5 Individuation and inverse number marking in Dagaare -
6 General number and the structure of DP* -
7 Plural marking beyond count nouns* -
8 Aspectual effects of a pluractional suffix: Evidence from Lithuanian⋆ -
9 Decomposing the mass/count distinction: Evidence from languages that lack it* -
10 On the mass/count distinction in Ojibwe -
11 Counting and classifiers⋆ -
12 Countability and numeral classifiers in Mandarin Chinese -
13 Semantic triggers, linguistic variation and the mass‐count distinction⋆ -
14 Classifying and massifying incrementally in Chinese language comprehension⋆ - References
- Index
- Oxford Studies in Theoretical Linguistics
(p.283) References
(p.283) References
- Source:
- Count and Mass Across Languages
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
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- Title Pages
- General Preface
- The Contributors
- Abbreviations
-
1 The count mass distinction: Issues and perspectives -
2 Lexical nouns are both +MASS and +COUNT, but they are neither +MASS nor +COUNT -
3 Aspects of individuation* -
4 Collectives in the intersection of mass and count nouns: A cross‐linguistic account* -
5 Individuation and inverse number marking in Dagaare -
6 General number and the structure of DP* -
7 Plural marking beyond count nouns* -
8 Aspectual effects of a pluractional suffix: Evidence from Lithuanian⋆ -
9 Decomposing the mass/count distinction: Evidence from languages that lack it* -
10 On the mass/count distinction in Ojibwe -
11 Counting and classifiers⋆ -
12 Countability and numeral classifiers in Mandarin Chinese -
13 Semantic triggers, linguistic variation and the mass‐count distinction⋆ -
14 Classifying and massifying incrementally in Chinese language comprehension⋆ - References
- Index
- Oxford Studies in Theoretical Linguistics