
This book explores the wide variety of cases in which the plural of nouns is lexical. When a plural is lexicalized it becomes part of what it is to know a certain word: pence, for example, is lexical because it means a plurality of a certain kind - a multiple value, not a set of physical objects like pennies - and knowing this reading is knowing the word. Languages exhibit countless examples of similar word-dependent irregularities in the form and meaning of plural, but these have never been analyzed in depth from a unified perspective. Dr Acquaviva aims to do just that, using analytic tools from formal semantics and theoretical morphology to shed light on the relation between grammar and the lexicon. After an introduction setting out his approach he divides the book into two parts. The first gives a structured description of the ways plurality can be lexicalized with an emphasis on description and categorization. The second analyzes in depth different types of lexical plurals in Italian, Irish, Arabic and Breton. A final chapter spells out the theoretical consequences for the analysis of the lexicon. The book is unusual in combining a broad typological classification with a unified morphological and semantic analysis based on a formal framework.
This book investigates the phenomenon of lexical plurals to determine how irregular plural forms and meanings are integrated into the lexicon rather than generated by productive grammatical rules. Paolo Acquaviva, a specialist in theoretical linguistics, utilizes a formal framework to bridge the gap between morphology and semantics. By examining cross-linguistic data, he argues that lexicalized plurals represent a distinct category of word-dependent knowledge that challenges standard modular views of grammar.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of the morphology-semantics interface, particularly for its rigorous application of formal tools to typologically diverse data. Readers frequently note the high level of academic density, making it a specialized resource primarily intended for researchers and advanced students in theoretical linguistics.
Page Count:
312
Publication Date:
2008-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191538620
ISBN-13:
9780191538629
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