The Plural is Unmarked: Evidence from Turkish, Hungarian and German

Author:

Yatsushiro Kazuko1ORCID,Geçkin Vasfiye2ORCID,Harmati-Pap Veronika3ORCID,Alexiadou Artemis4ORCID,Sauerland Uli1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft (ZAS)

2. Izmir Democracy University

3. Hungarian Academy of Sciences

4. Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft (ZAS) & Humboldt Universität zu Berlin

Abstract

Quantity distinctions are morphologically indicated in the majority of languages.However, the marking of these distinctions exhibits a high degree of cross-linguistic variation with respect to the number of quantity categories, their agreement properties, and the morphemes themselves. Furthermore, number marking on numerically quantified nouns varies across languages: for instance, while German and English use plural number marking with numerals other than “one” (for example, “two books”), Turkish and Hungarian use singular number marking with all numerals. Recent work has discussed how to explain number marking with numerals. In particular, Bale and Khanjian (2014) propose that the quantity concepts of the two types of languages vary semantically. We present novel evidence from a cross-linguistic study of Hungarian, Turkish and German child language, and argue that the quantity concepts do not vary, and the variation between languages must have a morphosyntactic explanation. 

Publisher

Open Library of the Humanities

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference73 articles.

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4. Cross-linguistic representations of numerals and number marking;Bale, AlanGagnon, MichaëlKhanjian, Hrayr;Proceedings of SALT 20,2010

5. On the relationship between morphological and semantic markedness: The case of plural morphology;Bale, AlanGagnon, MichaëlKhanjian, Hrayr;Morphology,2011

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