Abstract

I develop an account of the semantics and nominal number marking of the numeral+noun construction in Turkish, Western Armenian and English that combines insights from Scontras’ (2014) approach to the same data with Martí’s (2017, 2020) treatment of grammatical number, based on Harbour (2014). Fundamental to my approach are two of Harbour’s number features, [±atomic] and [±minimal], their compositional semantics, and a syntax where these features take the phrase that contains the numeral, which I call NumeralP, as their sister, following Scontras. The morphological number marking we find on noun phrases with numerals across languages is thus viewed as a result of the principled interplay of the spell out of number features, their place, and that of numerals, in the syntactic structure of noun phrases, and their semantic import. Numerals are provided with a uniform semantics, no matter the language, and the semantics assumed for Turkish and Western Armenian noun phrases is empirically justified. I compare my proposal to Scontras (2014) and to Bale, Gagnon & Khanjian (2011a), highlighting in particular the empirical and theoretical shortcomings of the latter. The proposed account fully grounds the semantic notions of minimality and atomicity in the morpho-syntax, uncovers a new domain where the effects of [±minimal] may be detected (cf. Harbour 2011, 2016), and demonstrates that an inclusive-only approach to plurality is not necessary in the account of the data. BibTeX info

Highlights

  • This paper is concerned with the morphology and compositional semantics of the numeral1+noun construction in plural-marking languages

  • Whether the semantics of N should vary from one language to another is an empirical question, and here Bale, Gagnon and Khanjian do provide an empirical argument that morphologically singular Ns in Turkish and Western Armenian are number-neutral, based on their semantic behavior when used as bare noun phrases

  • In this paper I have argued for an analysis of the cross-linguistic patterns in Table 1 based on the system in Scontras (2014), but with the following developments: (a)

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Summary

Introduction

This paper is concerned with the morphology and compositional semantics of the numeral1+noun construction in plural-marking languages. What the account proposed below does is to ground the semantic notions of atomicity and minimality, identified by both of my predecessors, Bale, Gagnon & Khanjian (2011a) and Scontras (2014), as crucial in explaining the data, in the morphosyntax of natural languages, in the form of semantically-contentful, morphosyntactic features. This is done in such a way that both the cross-linguistic typology of grammatical number and the properties of the numeral+noun construction are explained by one and the same set of tools.

Background
Proposal
The account
Turkish singular noun phrase semantics
Western Armenian singular noun semantics
A: Who stole my apple?
Conclusion

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