基本説明
Using tools from formal semantics and theoretical morphology, Dr Acquaviva analyzes the countless number of examples of word-dependent irregularities in the form and meaning of plural, and in doing so sheds light on the relation between grammar and the lexicon.
Full Description
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.
Contents
Introduction ; PART I: A TYPOLOGY OF LEXICAL PLURALS ; 1. Varieties of Non-Inflectional Plurals ; 2. Plurals and Morphological Lexicality ; 3. The Meaning(s) of Lexical Plurality ; PART II: FOUR CASE STUDIES ; 4. Italian Irregular Plurals in -a ; 5. Irish Counting Plurals ; 6. Arabic Broken Plurals ; 7. The System of Breton Plural Nouns ; PART III: ; 8. Theoretical Conclusions ; Concluding Remarks



