User:John Stephenson/sandbox: Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>John Stephenson
(drafting notes)
imported>John Stephenson
No edit summary
 
(194 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Plural
{{NOINDEX}}
 
*[[:Category:Inactive CZ Authors]]
Greenberg 1966: 28 - "The singular
*[[:Category:Inactive Astronomy Authors]]
frequently has no overt mark while the plural is marked by affix as in English,
*[[:Category:Inactive Biology Authors]]
except for plurals of the type 'sheep'.  A more careful statement would
*[[:Category:Inactive Chemistry Authors]]
therefore be that in no language is the plural expressed by a morpheme which
*[[:Category:Inactive Earth Sciences Authors]]
has no overt allomorph, while this is frequently true for the singular."
*[[:Category:Inactive Mathematics Authors]]
 
*[[:Category:Inactive Physics Authors]]
Kershaw  http://www.umich.edu/~archive/linguistics/linguist.list/volume.4/no.251-300
*[[:Category:Inactive Anthropology Authors]]
 
*[[:Category:Inactive Archaeology Authors]]
"First of all, in Polish (Zadrozny) and Russian (Bar-Lev, Cienki) some nouns,
*[[:Category:Inactive Economics Authors]]
but not all (Zadrozny is unclear on this point), exhibit a phonetically null
*[[:Category:Inactive Education Authors]]
plural.  There are three numbers in these languages (and in Ukrainian, which I
*[[:Category:Inactive Geography Authors]]
know something about): singular, paucal, and plural.  The singular is used for
*[[:Category:Inactive Law Authors]]
one, the paucal for two/three/four, and the plural for five-twenty.  At
*[[:Category:Inactive Linguistics Authors]]
twenty-one, the cycle is repeated, although the way the cycle repeats differs
*[[:Category:Inactive Politics Authors]]
between languages (at least, it appears to).  At any rate, in Russian, genitive
*[[:Category:Inactive Psychology Authors]]
feminine and neutur nouns have affixes only on singular and paucal; e.g.:
*[[:Category:Inactive Sociology Authors]]
    odno jabloko, dva jabloka, pjat' jablok
*[[:Category:Inactive Classics Authors]]
    one apple, two apples, five apples
*[[:Category:Inactive History Authors]]
(data from Cienki).  Other nouns, though, exhibit the opposite behavior:
*[[:Category:Inactive Literature Authors]]
    odin dom, dva doma, p'at' domov
*[[:Category:Inactive Philosophy Authors]]
    one house, two houses, five houses
*[[:Category:Inactive Religion Authors]]
(data from Bar-Lev).  The issue is further complicated by the fact that these
*[[:Category:Inactive Architecture Authors]]
morphemes are, after all, fusional (as Ringe notes)."
*[[:Category:Inactive Music Authors]]
 
*[[:Category:Inactive Theater Authors]]
http://urts120.uni-trier.de/glottopedia/index.php/Number
*[[:Category:Inactive Visual Arts Authors]]
*[[:Category:Inactive Agriculture Authors]]
*[[:Category:Inactive Business Authors]]
*[[:Category:Inactive Computers Authors]]
*[[:Category:Inactive Engineering Authors]]
*[[:Category:Inactive Food Science Authors]]
*[[:Category:Inactive Health Sciences Authors]]
*[[:Category:Inactive Journalism Authors]]
*[[:Category:Inactive Library and Information Science Authors]]
*[[:Category:Inactive Media Authors]]
*[[:Category:Inactive Military Authors]]
*[[:Category:Inactive Robotics Authors]]
*[[:Category:Inactive Games Authors]]
*[[:Category:Inactive Hobbies Authors]]
*[[:Category:Inactive Sports Authors]]
*[[:Category:Inactive Eduzendium Authors]]
*[[:Category:Inactive Topic Informant Authors]]

Latest revision as of 17:39, 4 March 2021