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Coordination in syntax is an important part of the analysis of
sentence structure. Niina Ning Zhang addresses the issues raised by
coordinate pairings and the implications of these structures,
looking in particular at examples within English and Chinese. The
volume covers the major questions regarding coordinates in syntax,
providing a fresh perspective to arguments raised within previous
literature. She explains how such coordinate complexes are
structured, how some coordinators can be combined in parts of
speech, the fixed nature of some of these pairings and what changes
exist between the coordinate and non-coordinate constructions. The
theories raised are backed up by a rich variety of examples as well
as providing a cross-linguistic perspective, contextualising these
ideas within current syntactic research.
This monograph addresses fundamental syntactic issues of classifier
constructions, based on a thorough study of a typical classifier
language, Mandarin Chinese. It shows that the contrast between
count and mass is not binary. Instead, there are two independently
attested features: Numerability, the ability of a noun to combine
with a numeral directly, and Delimitability, the ability of a noun
to be modified by a delimitive modifier, such as size, shape, or
boundary modifier. Although all nouns in Chinese are non-count
nouns, there is still a mass/non-mass contrast, with mass nouns
selected by individuating classifiers and non-mass nouns selected
by individual classifiers. Some languages have the counterparts of
Chinese individuating classifiers only, some languages have the
counterparts of Chinese individual classifiers only, and some other
languages have no counterpart of either individual or individuating
classifiers of Chinese. The book also reports that unit plurality
can be expressed by reduplicative classifiers in the language.
Moreover, for the constituency of a numeral expression, an
individual, individuating, or kind classifier combines with the
noun first and then the numeral is integrated; but a partitive or
collective classifier, like a measure word, combines with the
numeral first, before the noun is integrated into the whole nominal
structure. Furthermore, the book identifies the syntactic positions
of various uses of classifiers in the language. A classifier is at
a functional head position that has a dependency with a numeral, or
a position that has a dependency with a generic or existential
quantifier, or a position that represents the singular-plural
contrast, or a position that licenses a delimitive modifier when
the classifier occurs in a compound.
This monograph addresses fundamental syntactic issues of classifier
constructions, based on a thorough study of a typical classifier
language, Mandarin Chinese. It shows that the contrast between
count and mass is not binary. Instead, there are two independently
attested features: Numerability, the ability of a noun to combine
with a numeral directly, and Delimitability, the ability of a noun
to be modified by a delimitive modifier, such as size, shape, or
boundary modifier. Although all nouns in Chinese are non-count
nouns, there is still a mass/non-mass contrast, with mass nouns
selected by individuating classifiers and non-mass nouns selected
by individual classifiers. Some languages have the counterparts of
Chinese individuating classifiers only, some languages have the
counterparts of Chinese individual classifiers only, and some other
languages have no counterpart of either individual or individuating
classifiers of Chinese. The book also reports that unit plurality
can be expressed by reduplicative classifiers in the language.
Moreover, for the constituency of a numeral expression, an
individual, individuating, or kind classifier combines with the
noun first and then the numeral is integrated; but a partitive or
collective classifier, like a measure word, combines with the
numeral first, before the noun is integrated into the whole nominal
structure. Furthermore, the book identifies the syntactic positions
of various uses of classifiers in the language. A classifier is at
a functional head position that has a dependency with a numeral, or
a position that has a dependency with a generic or existential
quantifier, or a position that represents the singular-plural
contrast, or a position that licenses a delimitive modifier when
the classifier occurs in a compound.
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