2012
DOI: 10.1093/jos/ffs009
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Sortal, Relational, and Functional Interpretations of Nouns and Russian Container Constructions

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Cited by 46 publications
(52 citation statements)
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“…Crucially, a locative reading may emerge even in scenarios where the verb and the context favour a measure interpretation. Lima shows that this supports Partee and Borschev's (2012) hypothesis that individuating, possibly via container phrases, precedes measuring in language acquisition.…”
supporting
confidence: 73%
“…Crucially, a locative reading may emerge even in scenarios where the verb and the context favour a measure interpretation. Lima shows that this supports Partee and Borschev's (2012) hypothesis that individuating, possibly via container phrases, precedes measuring in language acquisition.…”
supporting
confidence: 73%
“…We implicitly took kilo to stand in for all measure terms, but distinct subclasses of measure terms have been identified: amount terms (e.g., kilo; Lønning 1987), container nouns (e.g., glass; Partee & Borschev 2012), and English-style classifiers (e.g., grain; Chierchia 1998a), to name just three. The next step is to see how these subclasses of measure terms behave within the proposed framework, and whether they in fact possess distinct semantics.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Participants were exposed to either a verbal context that favored a measure interpretation of the container phrases (“Maria drank two cups of water”/“Maria poured three cups of beans”) or a situation that favored a non‐measure interpretation of the container phrases (“Mary put two bottles of milk”/”Maria put two bowls of rice on the table”). Following Partee and Borschev (), we would expect that only non‐measure scenarios would be compatible with all conditions (Figure a–d), regardless of the size of the containers and whether they were full or partially full (see Figure for the different conditions manipulated).…”
Section: Counting and Measuringmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…Many studies have explored the semantics of container phrases, such as bags of in “three bags of rice” (Doetjes, ; Keizer, ; Khrizman, Landman, Lima, Rothstein, & Schvarcz, ; Landman, ; Landman, ; Lima, ; Partee & Borschev, ; Rothstein, , , , ; Scontras, ; Selkirk, ). As previously shown, in many languages described in the literature, container phrases are required in numeral constructions with substance and object mass nouns (16b).…”
Section: Counting and Measuringmentioning
confidence: 99%