Title: Nouns and Noun Phrases
1Nouns and Noun Phrases
- HS Sommersemester 2005
- Prof. Dr. Wolf Paprotté
2Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Overview
- Open and closed class items
- criteria for defining noun
- Semantic p.9
- Syntactic German and English examples p. 13
- Morphological, nominal inflection
- NUMBER p 27
- Spelling and pronounciation of inflected nouns
- GENDER p. 32
- CASE
3Nouns and Noun Phrases
Languages have two components which serve
complementary functions component 1 the closed
class of lexical forms which serve a
structuring function (prepositions,
conjunctions, inflections, ) they give
structure to the content in discourse, and to
the conceptual inventory of language ?
their function giving structure
4Nouns and Noun Phrases
component 2 the open class of lexical forms
they are numerous it is easy to create new
lexical entries they constitute the
conceptual content of discourse (stems of nouns,
verbs, adjectives, ) ? their function
determine the basic content of discourse
5Nouns and Noun Phrases
- The stewards served a hot meal to the
passengers. - Will the steward serve hot meals to the
passenger? - 5 open class elements which determine the
- referential content of the depicted situation -
- i.e. steward, serve, hot, meal, passenger
- closed class elements
- ed occurring before the time of
speaking - the entity known to the speaker and hearer
- -s plurality of number
-
6Nouns and Noun Phrases
- closed class elements (cont)
- a entity not known to the hearer
- to indicates who received sth
- the object status indicates the recipient
- if no new open class elements occur, the
referential content of the depicted situation
remains the same - new closed class elements cause
- word order interrogative instead of
declarative S - will epistemic modality / future tense
- different assignments of number
7HS Nouns and Noun Phrases
- 1. Words are assigned to grammatical categories
on the basis of their shared semantic, syntactic,
morphological properties - semantic criteria
- nouns denote entities (cat, dog, bank, hill)
- verbs denote actions (read, study, listen,
destroy) - adjectives denote properties (ill, rich,
stupid, slow) - adverbs denote manner (painfully, slowly,
badly) prepositions denote location (in, at,
under, on) - Discuss the following words assassination, fast
food, Münster, through abstract / concrete nouns
8Nouns and Nounphrases
- Open class forms are free to express any kind of
meaning / any kind of conceptual content - Closed class forms are restricted in the kinds of
concepts they communicate in many languages - inflection may indicate number(s) sg, pl, dual,
paucal - lexical items can indicate any number
- word formation may indicate large quantity or
size, as in Gr. - big (bad) Wolf - (nice) little Wolf Wolfara
Wolfaki - - no language inflects for colour, for
countable, even, odd, dozen
9HS Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Semantic properties for determining PoS
membership - Referencedef The phenomenon by which some noun
phrase in a - particular utterance or sentence is associated
with some entity in the real or conceptual world.
- Trask 1993, A Dictionary of grammatical terms
in Linguistics. London p. 232 -
- Referencedef the relationship which holds
between an expression - and what that expression stands for on
particular occasions of its - utterance.
- Lyons, Semantics, Vol. I, p. 170
- Reference is an utterance-dependent notion.
10HS Nouns and Noun Phrases
- In uttering Napoleon is a Corsican the speaker
refers to a certain - Individual by means of a referring expression.
- What is the speaker referring to by means of the
expression X? - X definite NP proper name, personal pronoun,
etc. - Singular definite reference referring to a
specific individual or class of individual - Singular indefinite reference
- Every evening, a heron flies over the chalet.
It nests in the grounds of the chateau.
11HS Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Distributive and collective general reference
- Those books cost 15 dollars.
- Non-referring definite NPs
- Smiths murderer is insane
-
- Generic reference
- A lion is a friendly beast.
- The lion is a friendly beast.
- Lions are friendly beasts.
12HS Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Sense Bedeutung
-
- John referring expression is a fool
functions predicatively - The criterion for substitutability in subject
position in this construction is referential
identity. - The criterion for substitutability in predicate
position is identity of sense. Lyons 1977
Vol I , p. 201 - The victor of Jena and the loser of Waterloo
13Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Syntactic properties of nouns
- distributional ( syntactic properties)
occurrence in specific contexts -
- the _______
- a_________
- two, three _________
- _______ N Npl
-
- some______
- every________
-
14Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Subclasses of N
- Proper Nouns
- Common Nouns
- Count Nouns (Dts Individuativa,
Gattungsnamen, Appellativa) - Noncount Nouns (Dts. Kontinuativa, Stoff- ,
Substanz bezeichnungen) - Count and non-count (mixed class)
- Test 1 for Count Nouns Sg _______
- The ______ A _______
- Every_______
- Test 2 for Count Nouns Pl All (the)______
- Some _______
- _________ / N NPL
15Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Testframe group1 group 2 group3
group 2 3 - I saw ____ John car furniture
brick - I saw the__ car furniture
brick - I saw a___ car
brick - I saw some__ car furniture
brick - I saw ______ cars
brick - proper nouns, common nouns, count nouns,
(individual countable - entities), noncount nouns (undifferentiated mass
or continuum) - Spree, Beethoven, cake, Puccini, Jerry, table,
stone, bread, grass, lawn, bottle, chair, idea,
paper, dog, music, warmth, stone
16Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Behaviour under determination (German nouns)
- Common Nouns / Individuativa
- Test countability
- Number
- Sing obligatory article
- Pl optional article word
- Hybrids
- Test frames for German nouns
- 1. ein ___ eine____ irgendein ____
- jeder, jedes, jede_____ Kardinalzahl
_______ - 2. einige, etliche, wenige, manche keine, viele,
alle ___ - 3. test for hybrids in German?
17Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Note some common nouns occurring only as
pluralia tantum take an obligatory article - Die Annalen / die Altforderen
- some pluralia tantum cannot be quantified
(uniqueness constraint) - Er schrieb zwei Memoiren
- A mentioned common noun may occur without an
article word - Gänsegeier ist ein Wort, das man häufig benutzt
- A common noun occuring with separable particles
of German verbs needs an article word - Ich freue mich über das Buch.
- Wir ärgern uns über jeden Fehler.
18Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Common nouns denoting professions, titles,
functions, status, nationality or origin etc.
occur as subject complements without an article - Professor Unheimlich re-surfaced recently.
- Er ist Bäcker / Lehrer / Student / Aktionär,
Anfänger - ? Professorin Heimlich hält gerade ihre
Vorlesung. - Frau Professor .
- ? Sie ist Tasse.
- Er ist Angehöriger / Christ / Muslim /
Flüchtling. - Test for other copula / AUX verbs (seem.)
- Er ist Berliner.
19Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Non-count nouns, (Dts Kontinuativa)
- without plural, a determiner may occur
- the denotatum cannot be counted
- denote quantities of substances if divided
into smaller - quantities substance stays the same
- may be quantified using alle, ein bißchen,
mancherlei, - wenig,
- Test frames
- ein bißchen ______ Anglistik / Fleiß / Gold
Stroh - viel ______ Suppe Fisch
- etwas ______ Humor
-
20Nouns and Noun Phrases
- non-count nouns contd
- allow plural Sortenplural Öle, Stähle,
Zemente Fische - Fisch (sg.) Kontinuativum Nullartikel def.
- indef article
- (pl.) Fischarten or countable number (3
Fische)
21Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Derived nouns (German), deverbal and deadjectival
- (semantic criterion these nouns denote some
state of affairs, i.e. a predicate plus 1 to n
argument positions - Ich beobachte seine Änderung der Meinung.
- Ich beobachte sein Ändern der Meinung.
- Ich beobachte, dass er seinen Meinung ändert.
- Ich beobachte die Änderungen der Meinung.
- State of affairs as a dass-clause, infinitival
clause, präpositional attribute, genitive
attribute, or part of a compound -
- Test for Anwendung Beendigung Abschürfung
22Nouns and Noun Phrases
- With respect to determination, the derived nouns
of German fall into two classes - sg Kontinuativa,
- pl Individuativa definite, indefinite and null
article -
- Test frame 1
- Ich bin gegen _______ Abrüstung, Abstinenz,
Ausbeutung, Überdüngung, Übermüdung - Sg definite or indefinite determiner / article
- Test frame 2
- Ich bin gegen die / eine _______ Abfassung,
Alarmierung, Anwendung, Auslagerung, Bedrohung,
Überspielung, Überraschung - Er beobachtet Äußerung
- ? Ich bin gegen Abfassung der Resolution.
23Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Nouns with null article
- Ãœbersee, Aids, Glasnost, Jahresfrist
- Nouns plus attributive adjective, null-article
- Schöne Pfingsten, fröhliche Weinachten, gutes
Neues Jahr - Nominalised infinitives, null-article is
possible no plural - Das Wandern ist ätzend. Ich genieße das Laufen
das Ãœben macht den Meister
24Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Determination behaviour of nouns null article
Individuative vs. Kontinuativa in German - Ich zahle per Scheck. Ich kaufe per Scheck.
- Erarbeitet nur noch per Anweisung.
- Er kommt als Seemann verkleidet zur Fete.
- Sie erhielten viel als Entschädigung
- Ich verstehe unter Berg etwas Anderes.
- Ich leide unter dem Trainer. ___ unter
Ãœberarbeitung durch (die)
Abschnürung der Bißwunde - Er kauft den Tisch. Ohne Tisch sieht das kahl
aus.
25Nouns and the Nounphrase
- Morphological criteria for POS membership the
inflectional and derivational properties of nouns - inflectional
- marking nouns for NUMBER SG or PL
- ?? marking nouns for CASE GENITIVE
- derivational
- properties of the wordform, affixes -ness,
-ion, -er - ?? Marking nouns for GENDER
- Discuss
- happier, lion, Loch Ness, sheep, geese, cats,
singularia tantum, gold, Henry pluralia tantum
binoculars, trousers, scales, shorts -
-
-
26Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Inflection of nouns
- A noun phrase (and its head) participates in a
number system which contrasts 2 concepts - singular (sg) one vs plural (pl) more
than one - 3 main classes
- singular invariable (music, gold Jackie the
unreal) - plural invariable people, scissors the rich,
the poor - variable subclass regular dog, dogs, cat,
cats, - subclass irregular mouse, mice
27Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Sg invariable nouns
- noncount beer, wine, sirup, music, dirt,
homework news - proper nouns, Henry, Ricky,
- abstract adjective heads
- nouns ending in ics acoustics, econmics,
physics, classics, - phonetics, politics (also pl) statistics (also
pl) - pl invariable nouns
- summation plural scissors, glasses, goggles,
pincers, tongs - pluralia tantum ending in s thanks, regards,
ashes, brains, clothes, arms, amends, bowels,
entrails, archives - some proper nouns the Alps, the Sahara
- unmarked plurals people, the police, cattle,
poultry, livestock - personal adjective heads the rich, the poor
28Nouns and Noun Phrases
- regular plurals cat, cats, bag, bags,crew, crews
- /-s/ has three realisations s, horse, horses
- z, size, sizes iz bush, bushes
- irregular plurals
- voicing and s plural calf, calves
- vowel change foot, feet,
- zero plural sheep
- -en plural child, children
- foreign plurals stimulus, stimuli larva,
larvae stratum, strata - matrix, matrices thesis, theses criterion,
criteria, tempo, tempi cherub, cherubim
29Nouns and Noun Phrases
- pronounciation of regular plurals
- -s after bases ending in voiceless consonants
other than sibilants - -z after bases ending in voiced consonants
other than sibilants - -Iz after bases ending in sibilants
- Voicing and s plural
- word final consonants /-th/ as in path /T/,
paths /Dz/ - but regular in berth, berths, length /T/,
lengths /Ts/
30Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Spelling of the regular plurals
- /-s/ in most nouns including those ending in
silent /-e/ as in book-s, hat-s, flower-s,
college-s - /-es/ after nouns ending in sibilants which are
spelled - -s, -x, -z, -ch, -sh gas-es, box-es, buzz-es,
church-es bush-es - /-os/ for nouns ending in o which is preceded by
a vowel or consonant as in bamboos, folios,
radios, studios, kangaroos - pianos, solos, quartos, kilos, memos, Eskimos,
photos, Filipinos -
31Nouns and Noun Phrases
- /-oes/ plural only in /oes-/ dominoes, echoes
embargoes, vetoes, potatoes, tomatoes, torpedoes - /-oes or -os/ banjos, buffaloes, tornados,
volcanoes, mulattos, manifestoes, mottos,
haloes, - /-ies/ nouns ending in -y, preceded by a
consonant drop the -y and add -ies as in skies,
! but days! - note exceptions
- - quy to -quies soliloquies
- proper nouns ending in -y have plurals -ys the
two Germanys, little Marys - doubling of final consonants as in quizzes, fezzes
32Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Proper nouns (Eigennamen propria)
- - person, brand, product, location, nation etc.
names - - semantic function denote and identify unique
entities - (note vague meaning of unique)
- - proper nouns occur with and without DET /
article - - genitive sg without article, word final affix
remains - Proper names with article some mountain, lake,
river region, building etc. names need an
article - die Türkei, die USA, die Schweiz, die Alhambra,
die Bretagne, die Balearen.
33Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Politically correct speech/language makes
sense or nonsense ? - Hidden assumption our Western societies are
dominated by male (speakers) the use of gender
marking in our languages proves it, - therefore substitute forms and linguistic signs
that refer to male beings by forms that refer to
females or at least by forms which are neutral - Flight attendant for airline hostess spokesman -
spokesperson chairwoman - chairman
chair(person) - s/he wo/man history - herstory
- ?dual gender artist, doctor, scientist, guest,
parent, teacher, singer, librarian, novelist,
student, foreigner - higher animals buck, doe, bull, cow, stallion,
mare, tiger, tigress, ram, ewe dog, bitch - Analyse the use of horse, dog, duck he-goat,
she-goat
34Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Some German examples
- Schüler(in), Student(in), Lehrer(in)
- Der Schüler Horst Rohlings fehlt heute wg.
Nasenbluten. - Für(einen) Lehrer unserer Schule ist das
blamables Verhalten. - Schüler sind bessere Menschen.
- Schülerinnen sind bessere Menschen.
- Die Ente, die Gans, das Huhn, das Kaninchen sie
sind alle durch den Vogelvirus bedroht. - ? Ganter sind aufmerksame Tiere, wie der/ein
Hund - Discuss the different uses !
35Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Liebe Bürgerinnen und Bürger liebe Wählerinnen
und Wähler, liebe Bürgermeisterinnen und
Bürgermeister - ? Ich danke allen Wählerinnen und Wählern und
verspreche, dass ich den mir erteilten
Wählerinnen- und Wählerauftrag gern annehme. - ? die Kandidatinnenfrage, die Kandidatenfrage
- Regierungschefin
- in der Reihe der Bundeskanzlerinnen und
Bundeskanzler - ? Wir warnen vor Taschendiebinnen.
- Nachahmer sind Diebe geistigen Eigentums
- ? Nachahmerinnen sind Diebinnen geistigen
Eigentums - ? Das Täterinnenprofil bitte an mich faxen!
- What works what doesnt work and why?
36Nouns and Noun Phrases
- GENDER def a grammatical classification of
nouns and pronouns found in certain languages
requiring different agreement forms on
determiners, adjectives, verbs, according to or
weakly related to the distinction of sex of the
referent. - un vieux livre, une vielle maison versus
- Prüfer, Prüferinnen, Prüferehrung
- Discuss the notions of MALE and FEMALE vs
MASCULINUM, FEMININUM, NEUTRUM - Gender languages typically function with notions
as size, shape, animacy, humanness, sex also
edibility, danger
37Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Biology (sex) versus grammar (gender)
- It is a mistake to analyse GENDER as any
lexical or grammatical distinction correlating
with sex, such as - he, she, it or duke, duchess, lion, lioness
- GENDER is a grammatical category sorting nouns
into different classes, paradigms (i.e. German
masculin, feminine, neuter)
38Nouns and Noun Phrases
- English has no gender distinctions which are
inflectionally marked. (Quirk et al 5.104) - Some pronouns (3rd person) and wh-pronouns
express natural gender (sex) distinctions - personal who, whom / it, which
- he, himself / she, herself masculine /
feminine - Personal male / female nouns boy/girl,
king/queen,monk - /nun uncle/aunt, brother/sister, man/woman,
father/mother - morphologically marked for gender god godess
- widower/widow
39Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Proper nouns Names
- Generally they do not share the formal
characteristics of common nouns - used regularly without article the Benedict
- unique reference, lack number contrast
- lack determination, except for reinterpretation
as in - I used to know a Julia Roberts
- his new Shakespeare
- occur with descriptor multiword units!
- Leicester Road President Bush
-
40Nouns and Noun Phrases
- lack modification, no modifier insertions no
change of inflection - Kings famous College the beautiful Münster
- allow only nonrestrictive relative clause or
nonrestrictive apposition - Boris Yeltsin whose daugther lives next door
- Leonnard, a brilliant composer
- with premodification (emotional coloring)
- The gorgeous Miss Minnie
41Nouns and Noun Phrases
- kinds of names (1) personal names first or
Christian name family name - Ms mIz, Mr. and Mrs. Smith Marian S. Walter
- Ms Waterhouse
- with appositional title / or other appositive
- General, Judge, Chancellor, Governor,
Professor, Cardinal Brown Lord Nelson, Lady
Chatterly the British architect Foster, King
George, Chairman Mao, Doctor Jekyll
42Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Forms of vocatives
- (person) names, first and last name, full name
with or without a preceding title, pet name /
nickname - Standard apellatives, usually without
modification - family relationships, mother, father, son,
granny mum, dad, - titles of respect madam, sir, my Lord, Your
Honour - marker of status president, prime minister, your
majesty - Terms for occupations
- Waiter, driver officer, nurse
- Epithets favorable honey, darling, sweetie pie,
love - unfavorable idiot, coward
- general nouns gentlemen, ladies
43Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Kinds of names (2) temporal names
- Names of festivals, religious dates
- Christmas Day, Independence Day Easter Sunday
- New Year, Ramadan
- Names of days, months, seasons
- Monday, Tuesday, Friday, etc.
- January, February, March, etc
- Spring, Summer, Autumn / Fall / Winter
- I hate Mondays
- She will leave on Saturday.
- She left on the following Sunday.
- She left on a Sunday.
44Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Kinds of names (3) geographical names
- Continents, countries,states, regions
- America, Australia, Asia, Africa
- Cities, towns, roads /streets
- Berlin, Boston, Brussels, The Strand Park Lane.
- Lakes, mountains
- Lake Ladoga, Ben Nevis, Mount Snowdon
- normally without the definite article but
- The Sahara, the Yemen, the Punjab, the
Everglades - Locative names consisting of proper noun common
noun descriptor - Hampstead Heath, Golders Green, Finchley Road
45Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Numerous categories of names
- Product names, company names
- institution names, airports,museums, theatres
- Forests, woods, hills, rivers, oceans, canals,
islands - Hotels, restaurants, motels,
- Hospitals ships
- Task - find other categories of named entities
- list their names
- Determine the rules for the occurrence of a
preceeding definite artiicle
46Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Case as a grammatical category Model 1
- English nouns have two cases the common case
and the genitive - Case as a grammatical category Model 2
- English nouns are not marked for case
distinctions -
- How to explain
- (a) case marking in pronouns separate
discussion (? relics of a complex former case
system) - (b) use of s- genitive in relation to
prepositional, post modifier of-construction
47Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Pronounciation of genitive /iz/, /s/,or /z/
follows the rules of plural -s - Spelling of genitive
- singular noun apostrophy plus s,
- cats dogs mothers, childs
- plural noun s plus an apostrophy
- cats dogs ! childrens
48Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Argumentation for model 1
- stays within the traditional model of grammar
(Latin) - the present language is a result of history
linguistic change which started in OE and
consisted of the loss of inflectional forms
marking case - its syntactic function marking for subject-hood
or object-hood has been taken over by word order
49Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Argumentation for model 2
- There is no inflectional marking for common case
only the s plus an apostrophy - The fact that the marking of Subject and object
functions is superfluous English word order
determines the function of subject and object(s) - The re-interpretation of the apostrophy s as a
preposition is supported by the fact that the
genitive may determine a nounphrase, not just a
single noun - The king of Englands hat
50Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Kinds of genitive
- Possessive genitive
- Ms Johnsons hat Ms J. has a hat
- Subjective genitive, objective genitive
- The boys resignation the boy has resignated
- The boys release released the boy
- Partitive genitive
- Genitive of origin, attribute, measure
- The girls story the victims courage, five
days absence - Descriptive genitive
- A womens college
51Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Gender and genitive
- tendency the genitive is favoured for classes
which are highest on the gender scale - personal nouns (refer to human beings)
- higher animals
- Collective nouns geographical / national states
- nouns in end focus
- damaged the ships funnel
- Difficulties in generalising (cf. Quirk et al
5.118 5.120)
52Nouns and Noun Phrases
- Genitive in determinative function
- as determinative, it fills the slot occupied by
the central determiner the, or by possessive
pronoun his, her, a single noun, noun plus own
determiners / modifiers - The / her / Jennys / my daughters new dress
- my determinative to daughter NPs
genitive NP - many peoples ambition
- Genitive construction interpreted as NP,
embedded and functioning in a superordinate NP as
a determinative - common genitive,
- s equivalent to of-PreP genitive
53Nouns and Nounphrases
-
- Genitive as modifier has a classifying role
- There were ten farmers wives at the meeting /
farmers wives - Model 2
- s enclitic postposition because CASE applies
to an NP, not just a single noun (group genitive
in which the genitiv ending is affixed to a
postmodifier) - the University of Münsters rector
54Nouns and Nounphrases
- Independent genitive
- My car is faster than Johns
- Marys was the prettiest
- Local genitive
- Lets have dinner at Tiffanys
- I am going to the dentists
- Used for normal residences ( St. Pauls, St.James
- For business locations (the grocers, the
butchers
55Nouns and Nounphrases
- Of-genitive vs genitive as case
- often similar in function and meaning
- constraints on acceptability /appropriateness
- the cooks taste ? the taste of the cook
- Johns school ?the school of John
- the front of the house the houses front
56Nouns and Nounphrases
- Some bits of terminology (source Wikipedia)
- Als obliquus (lat. eigentlich) wird der Kasus
bezeichnet, der nicht das Subjekt des Satzes
markiert. - Oblique Kasus sind im Deutschen also
- Genitiv
- Dativ
- Akkusativ
-
- Der casus rectus, der Nominativ, markiert das
Subjekt eines Satzes.
57- Bsp Das moderne Russische kennt sechs Kasus
-
- Nominativ, ???????????? ?????,
- Genitiv, ??????????? ?????,
- Dativ, ????????? ?????,
- Akkusativ, ??????????? ?????,
- Instrumental, ???????????? ????? und
- Praepositiv, ?????????? ?????,
-
58Nouns and Nounphrases
- Die Kasus sind bei den deklinierbaren
Substantiven an der Kasusendung als Einheit von
Kasusbedeutung und Kasusform zu erkennen - Funktionen der einzelnen Kasus
- 1. Nominativ Grundform aller Kasus,
syntaktisch unabhängig, der casus rectus
gegenüber den casus obliqui, oblique Kasus. - - markiert Subjekt, Prädikatsnomen oder
Apposition. - - erscheint immer ohne, der Präpositiv immer
mit Präposition. - - die obliquen Kasus kommen ohne (reine Kasus)
oder mit Präposition vor (Praepositionalkasus).
59Nouns and Nounphrases
- 2. Genitiv Der Genitiv steht meist in der
Attributfunktion bei einem anderen Substantiv
(adnominaler Genitiv, (Subjektgenitiv,
Objektgenitiv, partitiver Genitiv etc.) - 3. Dativ bezeichnet oft den Adressaten der
Handlung, den Empfänger, Nutznießer, Besitzer
eines Objekts - 4. Akkusativ Der Akkusativ bezeichnet das
direkte Objekt transitiver Verben, oder das
Handlungsziel. - 5. Instrumental kennzeichnet das Werkzeug der
Handlung. Hat syntaktische Funktion Objekt und
semantische Bedeutung Subjekt in
Passivkonstruktion. - 6. Praepositiv Der Praepositiv kombiniert
Praeposition und Kasusform, was außer im
Nominativ in allen Kasus vorkommt.
60Nouns and Nounphrases
- Elements and functions in the NP determiner
- Determiners determine, i.e. restrict, the
reference - of the NP in which they occur, typical
determiners - 1. central determiners
- - definite and indefinite article the, a, an
- - demonstrative adjectives with number and
- proximity indication this, that, these,
those - - possessive pronouns my, his, her etc.
- - every, each, no, which, what, some enough
- Determiner is any element whose function it is to
enter into the - structure of referring expressions and to
determine their reference as - definite rather than non-definite
- (Lyons 1977,p. 454)
61- Test
- anything that can substitute for a determiner
without changing the syntactic properties of the
NP is a determiner - central determiners do not co-occur within the
same NP - a my car
- my a friend
- Central determiners have the same distribution as
the definite or indefinite article
62- A problem
- delimiting quantifiers and determiners
- all, some, each, every, many few, several
- the lion , a lion specific or generic
reference - Task generate / find expressions whose
reference is determined in terms of size, of set,
how many, how much
63- Determining common nouns
- count noun SG, count noun PL
- Mass noun SG,
- Closed system items, the, a, no, what, this,
every, each, either - Predeterminers occur before central determiners
- the sequence of det.s in the NP all, both,
half - multipliers double, twice, three times
- fractions one third, three fifths
- such what
-
64- All the many pretty intelligent students / All
this junk - All of the overworked students / all the students
- both his girls / both students / both the student
- Half a liter of petrol / Half this cake .
- All my life ,/ all my friends
- Such a surprise / what a hot sauce
- Double the sum
- One-third the time
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