Constructions with and without articles
Publication date
2015
Editors
Borik, Olga
Gehrke, Berit
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Part of book
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Abstract
Even in languages with a well-developed system of articles, such as Germanic and Romance languages, we find constructions in which the noun can appear without an article. Such constructions are often related to pseudo incorporation (cf. Borik & Gehrke, this volume), but this paper takes a broader perspective in terms of ‘weak referentiality’, and provides a roadmap for within and crosslinguistic variation. Bare nouns are sometimes in complementary distribution with the indefinite article (in predication, incorporation, with/without PPs), and sometimes with the definite article (in (the) hospital, play (the) piano). There is a third class of bare constructions which is neither definite nor indefinite, but plural or quantificational in nature. Here we find bare coordination (mother and child), reduplication (English from door to door = many doors in succession) and bare PPs like Dutch per jaar (= each year). The three classes are shown to be subject to different constraints within and across languages, due to the interaction of lexicon, syntax and semantics.
Keywords
semantics, referentiality, bare nominals
Citation
de Swart, H 2015, Constructions with and without articles. in O Borik & B Gehrke (eds), The syntax and semantics of pseudo-incorporation. Syntax and Semantics, vol. 40, Brill, Leiden, pp. 126-156. https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004291089_005