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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Silva NurmioPublisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd Imprint: Wiley-Blackwell Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.454kg ISBN: 9781119615262ISBN 10: 1119615267 Pages: 288 Publication Date: 05 March 2020 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsAbbreviations Corpora Grammatical glosses Acknowledgements 1. Introduction 1.1 The scope and purpose of the book 1.2 Welsh and the Celtic languages 1.3 Sources and methodology 2. Grammatical number in Welsh 2.1 Singular and plural: the main number distinction 2.1.1 Agreement targets 2.2 Initial consonant mutations 3. The ‘dual’ 3.1 Introduction 3.2 The minor dual in Middle Welsh 3.2.1 Minor duals in the sample and beyond 3.3 The Breton dual 3.3.1 The Breton ‘plural-duals’, plurals of duals and possible Welsh parallels 3.4 Comparison of the Welsh and Breton duals 3.5 Irish duals and the loss of the dual 3.6 The dual from a cross-linguistic perspective 3.6.1 Semitic languages 3.6.2 Russian 3.6.3 The ‘elliptical dual’ and ‘paral’ in Indo-European languages 3.7 Conclusion 4. Morphological collectives and singulatives 4.1 Introduction to collective nouns in Welsh and in Celtic 4.1.1 Lexical collectives (or “corporate nouns”) 4.1.2 Morphological collectives in the corpus 4.1.3 Treatment of collective nouns in previous literature 4.2 Is the collective a number category in Welsh? 4.2.1 Agreement and morphological characteristics of the morphological collectives 4.2.2 Perceptual salience 4.2.3 Frequency and markedness 4.2.4 Semantics 4.2.5 Diachronic stability of morphological collectives and acquisition 4.3 Morphosemantic analysis of the suffixes -yn and -en 4.3.1 Singulative 4.3.2 Diminutive 4.3.3 Hypocoristic 4.3.4 Changes in category: adjective → noun and verb → noun 4.3.5 Noun → noun 4.3.6 ‑yn/-en added to loanwords from English (and sometimes other languages) 4.3.7 ‑yn/‑en add a person denotation 4.3.8 Variant suffixes: ‑cyn/‑cen and -an 4.3.9 Suppletion and the rise of new -yn/-en forms 4.3.10 Conclusion: singulatives 4.4 Inflection of morphological collectives and singulatives 4.4.1 Pluralized singulatives 4.4.2 Semantic categories and pluralized collectives 4.4.3 Nouns with marked singular and plural forms 4.5 Alternative for the singulative? Classifier-like constructions in Welsh and in Celtic 4.6 Welsh collective nouns in a cross-linguistic perspective 4.6.1 Dagaare 4.6.2 Germanic languages 4.6.3 Arabic 4.6.4 The semantics of the diminutive cross-linguistically 4.7 Conclusion 5. Mass nouns 5.1 Introduction 5.1.1 Previous scholarship on mass nouns in the Brittonic languages 5.1.2 Tests for distinguishing different noun categories 5.2 Mass nouns in text corpora 5.3 Fieldwork 5.3.1 Results 5.3.2 Discussion 5.4 Theoretical approaches to mass nouns 5.4.1 Mass and count are features of noun phrases, not of nouns 5.4.2 Gradience within the nominal system 5.4.3 The typology of pluralized mass nouns 5.5 Conclusion 6. Number agreement in Welsh: adjectives 6.1 Introduction 6.2 Plural adjectives in the sample: formations, functions and frequencies 6.2.1 Plural adjectives in Breton and Cornish 6.2.2 Order of noun and adjective 6.3 Plural adjectives: inflection and derivation 6.3.1 Plurals of adjectives in -edig 6.3.2 Substantival plural adjectives in -(i)aid 6.4 Genre, register and language: plural adjectives as a case study 6.4.1 Plural adjectives in the Brut y Brenhinedd translations 6.4.2 Plural adjectives in poetry 6.5 Some Modern Welsh developments 6.6 Conclusion 7. Number agreement in Welsh: numeral phrases 7.1. Introduction 7.2 Nouns with a numerative in Middle (and Old) Welsh 7.2.1. Time expressions with numerals: blwyddyn ‘year’ and dydd ‘day’ 7.3 Numeral phrases in Middle Breton and Middle Cornish 7.4 Numeral phrases in Irish 7.5 Animacy and frequency 7.6 Conclusion 8. Conclusion List of textual sources References IndexReviewsAuthor InformationSilva Nurmio received her BA and MPhil degrees from Aberystwyth University before completing her PhD at the University of Cambridge. She spent a year during her doctoral studies as a visiting researcher at Philipps-Universität Marburg, Germany. Her MPhil and doctoral theses focused on Welsh (Celtic, Indo-European), with comparative work with the other Celtic languages. During her first postdoctoral position at the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies she started broadening her work on grammatical number to general linguistics and typology. Her current postdoctoral project at the University of Helsinki looks at the typology of singulatives. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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