Abstract
The systematic connection between English mass and count nouns has long been known. Those working within lexical semantics have frequently cited such systematic connections as instances which are susceptible of treatment by so-called lexical rules (Leech, 1974), lexical inference rules (Ostler and Atkins, 1991), or subtype coercion (Pustejovsky, 1995). This paper has three aims: to present the principal morphological and semantic properties of the mass count distinction; to formulate, in terms of lexical (inference) rules, the empirical generalizations pertinent to systematic connection between English mass and count nouns; and to show how such rules fit with a syntactic and semantic theory of English common noun phrases.
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Gillon, B.S. (1999). The Lexical Semantics of English Count and Mass Nouns. In: Viegas, E. (eds) Breadth and Depth of Semantic Lexicons. Text, Speech and Language Technology, vol 10. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-0952-1_2
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-0952-1_2
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