Number is a major research domain in semantics, syntax and
morphology. However, no current theory of number is applicable to
all three fields. In this work, the author argues that a unified
theory is not only possible, but necessary for the study of
Universal Grammar. Through insightful analysis of unfamiliar data,
the author shows that one and the same feature set is implicated in
semantic and morphological number phenomena alike, with syntax
acting as the conduit between the two. At the heart of the study is
an original treatment of Kiowa, a North American language with a
remarkable constellation of characteristics, including semantically
based noun classification and complex agreement morphology.
This volume presents: (1) the foundations of a unified
morphosemantic theory of number; (2) insight into the flow of
information from the lexicon, via syntax, into the morphology; (3)
wide-ranging topics: nominal semantics, noun classes, DP syntax,
agreement, suppletion, complex morphology.
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