Morphology-Semantics Mismatches and the Nature of Grammatical Features

Peter W Smith author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:De Gruyter

Published:19th Apr '21

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Morphology-Semantics Mismatches and the Nature of Grammatical Features cover

Hybrid nouns have a morphological shape that doesn’t match their semantic interpretation. Such nouns pose clear and interesting questions for the nature of grammatical features. For instance, how does a single feature contribute distinct information values to different components of the grammar? Furthermore, what does this observation reveal about the syntax, often taken to mediate between the morphology and the semantics? This book studies hybrid nouns and argues that a single grammatical feature is comprised of two halves, a semantic half and a morphological half, that coexist in the syntax before being sent to the respective interfaces. Viewing features in this way allows us a new look at numerous types of hybrid nouns, such as Imposter constructions, nouns of collection, as well as nouns like ‘furniture’ that straddle the mass-count distinction. Moreover, the study of the agreement patterns of hybrid nouns shows that semantic features behave differently to morphological features under agreement, providing a novel insight into the nature of the mechanism that underlies morphosyntactic agreement.

ISBN: 9781501517198

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 542g

281 pages