[Lingtyp] Query: looking for singulatives
Jan Rijkhoff
linjr at cc.au.dk
Mon May 13 12:07:39 UTC 2019
Corrrection:
Earlier I wrote: “On transnumeral set nouns (that do not require a numeral classifier when counted, see (b) above), as attested in e.g. Oromo, Georgian, Turkish and many other languages, such markers serve to indicate the size of a set entity.”
However, I didn’t mean to imply that all these languages (with ‘nominal aspect markers’) also have singulative affixes; of the three language mentioned, only Oromo has them.
Languages with a singulative marker are a small subset of all the languages with --typically optional-- nominal aspect markers on their set nouns (mostly marking collective or distributive aspect).
Apologies for the confusion.
Jan R
From: Lingtyp <lingtyp-bounces at listserv.linguistlist.org> on behalf of "Nurmio, Silva M" <silva.nurmio at helsinki.fi>
Date: Monday, 13 May 2019 at 09.15
To: "lingtyp at listserv.linguistlist.org" <lingtyp at listserv.linguistlist.org>
Subject: [Lingtyp] Query: looking for singulatives
Dear all,
I’m looking for data on singulatives and I’m writing to ask for your help in tracking down more instances of this phenomenon. There is so far no comprehensive list of singulatives in the world’s languages that’s informed by an operational definition of what constitutes a singulative, and my aim is to produce such a database.
My working definition of the singulative is that it is a noun form with any marker (inflectional or derivational) that creates a meaning ‘one’ or ‘(one) unit’ when added to a base, i.e. a singulativizing and individuating marker. Bases for singulatives tend to be mass nouns, plurals, collectives of different kinds, general number forms, and sometimes non-nominal bases like adjectives. Here are four examples of different types of singulatives under my definition:
(1) Bayso (Afro-Asiatic): lúban ‘lion(s)’ (general number), singulative lúban-titi ‘a lion’
(2) Russian (Indo-European) gorox ‘pea(s)’ (mass), singulative goroš-ina ‘a pea’
(3) Italian (Indo-European) cioccolato ’chocolate’ (mass), singulative cioccolat-ino ’a chocolate praline, chocolate sweet’
(4) Welsh (Indo-European) unigol ‘individual’ (adjective), singulative unigol-yn ‘an individual’
These examples show that singulatives occur in different number systems, and they can be productive or unproductive (like the Russian -ina suffix). I also include diminutive markers which have a singulative function, as seen in (3) (Jurafsky 1996 calls this the ’partitive’ function of diminutives). Forms that are singulatives are often not described as such in grammars (especially types 3 and 4), making them harder to find. I am also including singulatives in older language stages which have since been lost (e.g. Old Irish).
Below is a list of languages (alphabetical order) on which I already have data. I would be very grateful for any pointers to grammars, language descriptions or other mentions of singulatives in languages which are not on the list, or if you think there are sources for any of the already listed languages that I’m likely to have missed.
Thank you very much in advance!
Best wishes,
Silva Nurmio
Aari
Akkadian
Arabic (several dialects)
Arbore
Baiso/Bayso
Baule
Berber
Bidyogo
Bora
Breton
Burushaski
Cantonese
Cornish
Dagaare
Dutch
Enets (Forest Enets and Tundra Enets)
Ewe
Fox
Gede'o
Hebrew
Imonda
Italian
Itelmen
Kambaata
Kiowa
Krongo
Majang
Maltese
Marle (Murle)
Masa
Miraña
Nafusi
Nahuatl (all dialects?)
Ojibwe (all dialects?)
Old Irish
Oromo (Borana dialect)
Resígaro
Russian
Shilluk
Shona
Sidamo
Swahili
Tariana
Tewa
Tigre
Tiwa
Towa
Turkana
Ukrainian
Welsh
Yiddish
Zulu
Dr Silva Nurmio
Research Fellow
Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies
Fabianinkatu 24 (P.O. Box 4)
00014 University of Helsinki, Finland
https://tuhat.helsinki.fi/portal/en/person/sinurmio
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