Startseite Linguistik & Semiotik 8 Number in West Circassian
Kapitel
Lizenziert
Nicht lizenziert Erfordert eine Authentifizierung

8 Number in West Circassian

  • Irina Bagirokova , Yury Lander und Paul Phelan
Veröffentlichen auch Sie bei De Gruyter Brill
Number in the World's Languages
Ein Kapitel aus dem Buch Number in the World's Languages

Abstract

This chapter describes the expression of number in West Circassian, a polysynthetic language of the Northwest Caucasian family. In West Circassian, nouns contrast between non-specific deficient forms undefined for number, unmarked forms which usually - but not always - express the singular meaning, and forms which explicitly mark plurality (either by a simple plural affix or by a cumulative case-number suffix). Notably, the plural morphology attaches both to count nouns and to mass nouns, sometimes triggering various semantic shifts. The contexts where a form without a plural marker may have plural denotation include not only nominals with non-specific reference but also possessives and non-locutor definite pronominal phrases. Number can also be expressed by a dedicated associative plural suffix (whose use is however severely restricted) and by indexing outside the noun whose use has a predominantly semantic basis. The language further displays some minor constructions, such as the honorific use of indexing, a dyadic construction based on reciprocal morphology, and a pattern close to inclusory constructions.

Abstract

This chapter describes the expression of number in West Circassian, a polysynthetic language of the Northwest Caucasian family. In West Circassian, nouns contrast between non-specific deficient forms undefined for number, unmarked forms which usually - but not always - express the singular meaning, and forms which explicitly mark plurality (either by a simple plural affix or by a cumulative case-number suffix). Notably, the plural morphology attaches both to count nouns and to mass nouns, sometimes triggering various semantic shifts. The contexts where a form without a plural marker may have plural denotation include not only nominals with non-specific reference but also possessives and non-locutor definite pronominal phrases. Number can also be expressed by a dedicated associative plural suffix (whose use is however severely restricted) and by indexing outside the noun whose use has a predominantly semantic basis. The language further displays some minor constructions, such as the honorific use of indexing, a dyadic construction based on reciprocal morphology, and a pattern close to inclusory constructions.

Heruntergeladen am 23.12.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110622713-009/html
Button zum nach oben scrollen