Phoronyms; Classifiers, Class Nouns, and the Pseudopartitive Construction (Berkeley Insights in Linguistics and Semiotics #68) (Hardcover)

Phoronyms; Classifiers, Class Nouns, and the Pseudopartitive Construction (Berkeley Insights in Linguistics and Semiotics #68) By Christopher Beckwith Cover Image

Phoronyms; Classifiers, Class Nouns, and the Pseudopartitive Construction (Berkeley Insights in Linguistics and Semiotics #68) (Hardcover)

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This is the first book devoted to the phoronym, a largely overlooked grammatical category that includes measures such as cup in a cup of tea, classifiers such as head in ten head of cattle, and other types, all of which occur in the pseudopartitive construction. Both measures and noun classification (the defining feature of classifiers) are thought to occur in all languages, so the phoronym is a linguistic universal. This book is the first to combine the two major theoretical approaches to the topic and includes the first detailed studies of group classifiers and repeaters, as well as the first study of classifiers in Finnish and Russian. It also covers class nouns and their components - which are connected grammatically and semantically to both classifiers and gender - and discusses possible connections of classifiers with sublinguistic cognition. The analysis focuses on Mandarin Chinese, English, Japanese, and Thai, but Finnish, Hungarian, Tibetan, Uzbek, and other languages are also discussed.
The Author: Christopher I. Beckwith is Professor of Central Eurasian Studies at Indiana University, where he received his Ph.D. in Uralic and Altaic studies. He is the recipient of a MacArthur Fellowship (1986), a Guggenheim Fellowship (2004), and other awards. Beckwith is the author of Koguryo, Language of Japan's Continental Relatives (2004; second edition 2007) and numerous other books and articles.
Product Details ISBN: 9781433101397
ISBN-10: 1433101394
Publisher: Peter Lang Us
Publication Date: November 14th, 2007
Pages: 226
Language: English
Series: Berkeley Insights in Linguistics and Semiotics