Ayuda
Ir al contenido

Dialnet


Resumen de On the semantics of comparison across categories

Alexis Wellwood

  • This paper explores the hypothesis that all comparative sentences-- nominal, verbal, and adjectival--contain instances of a single morpheme that compositionally introduces degrees. This morpheme, sometimes pronounced much, semantically contributes a structure-preserving map from entities, events, or states, to their measures along various dimensions. A major goal of the paper is to argue that the differences in dimensionality observed across domains are a consequence of what is measured, as opposed to which expression introduces the measurement. The resulting theory has a number of interesting properties. It characterizes the notion of 'measurement' uniformly across comparative constructions, in terms of non-trivial structure preservation. It unifies the distinctions between mass/count nouns and atelic/telic verb phrases with that between gradable and non-gradable adjectives. Finally, it affords a uniform characterization of semantically anomalous comparisons across categories


Fundación Dialnet

Dialnet Plus

  • Más información sobre Dialnet Plus