Home Chapter 3. A formal restriction on gender resolution
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

Chapter 3. A formal restriction on gender resolution

  • Sedigheh Moradi
View more publications by John Benjamins Publishing Company
All Things Morphology
This chapter is in the book All Things Morphology

Abstract

Resolved gender agreement occurs with coordination structures where combinations of two distinct genders are resolved into a different gender value. I have studied a representative sample of languages to understand why only a few of the logically conceivable patterns of agreement are attested. Starting from an underlying hierarchy of gender, I have constructed a pointwise algebra to represent various gender combinations. The gender hierarchy is directly extracted from the organization of the typological data. Combining abstract algebra and the mathematical notion of monotonicity helps us understand the restricted set of attested patterns to only allow monotonic mappings from the base hierarchy to output forms.

Abstract

Resolved gender agreement occurs with coordination structures where combinations of two distinct genders are resolved into a different gender value. I have studied a representative sample of languages to understand why only a few of the logically conceivable patterns of agreement are attested. Starting from an underlying hierarchy of gender, I have constructed a pointwise algebra to represent various gender combinations. The gender hierarchy is directly extracted from the organization of the typological data. Combining abstract algebra and the mathematical notion of monotonicity helps us understand the restricted set of attested patterns to only allow monotonic mappings from the base hierarchy to output forms.

Downloaded on 13.9.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1075/cilt.353.03mor/html
Scroll to top button