Noun Categorization × @cite{chierchia-1998} Nominal Mapping Parameter @cite{chierchia-1998}
Connects the cross-linguistic noun categorization typology in
Phenomena.Agreement.NounCategorization to the Nominal Mapping
Parameter from Theories.Semantics.Lexical.Noun.Kind.Chierchia1998.
Predictions verified #
argOnly_implies_numeral_classifier: [+arg, -pred] → numeral classifierspredOnly_implies_noun_class: [-arg, +pred] → noun classmandarin_chierchia_consistent,japanese_chierchia_consistent,french_chierchia_consistent,italian_chierchia_consistent: Actual classifier types match predictions
Known gaps #
- English [+arg, +pred] prediction (no system) not yet connected to data
Map NominalMapping to the expected classifier type. [+arg, -pred] languages have numeral classifiers. [-arg, +pred] languages have noun class/gender. [+arg, +pred] languages (English/Germanic) lack a productive system.
Equations
- One or more equations did not get rendered due to their size.
- Phenomena.Agreement.Studies.Chierchia1998.nominalMappingToClassifierType Semantics.Lexical.Noun.Kind.Chierchia1998.NominalMapping.argAndPred = none
Instances For
French mapping is [-arg, +pred].
Mandarin mapping is [+arg, -pred].
Japanese mapping is [+arg, -pred].
Italian mapping is [-arg, +pred]. Italian is the
star witness for predOnly: bare arguments are restricted and D
must be projected for argumenthood.
The Chierchia-Aikhenvald bridge: [+arg, -pred] languages are numeral classifier languages.
[-arg, +pred] languages are noun class languages.
[+arg, +pred] languages (English/Germanic) lack a productive noun categorization system in Aikhenvald's sense.
Mandarin's actual classifier type matches the Chierchia prediction.
Japanese's actual classifier type matches the Chierchia prediction.
French's actual classifier type matches the Chierchia prediction.
Italian's actual classifier type matches the Chierchia prediction.
French and Italian agree on Chierchia mapping: both are predOnly.