19006129 03 01 01 JB code JB John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 JB code SLCS 99 Hb 15 9789027231109 06 10.1075/slcs.99 13 2007052230 00 BB 01 245 mm 02 164 mm 08 835 gr 10 01 JB code SLCS 02 0165-7763 02 99.00 01 02 Studies in Language Companion Series Studies in Language Companion Series 01 01 Essays on Nominal Determination From morphology to discourse management Essays on Nominal Determination: From morphology to discourse management 1 B01 01 JB code 284093373 Henrik Høeg Müller Høeg Müller, Henrik Henrik Høeg Müller Copenhagen Business School 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/284093373 2 B01 01 JB code 485093374 Alex Klinge Klinge, Alex Alex Klinge Copenhagen Business School 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/485093374 01 eng 11 392 03 03 xviii 03 00 369 03 01 22 415 03 2008 P299.D48 04 Grammar, Comparative and general--Determiners. 04 Definiteness (Linguistics) 10 LAN009000 12 CFK 24 JB code LIN.DISC Discourse studies 24 JB code LIN.PRAG Pragmatics 24 JB code LIN.SEMAN Semantics 24 JB code LIN.THEOR Theoretical linguistics 01 06 02 00 Addresses the linguistic and philosophical issues in the subject field of nominal determination at various interface levels between morphology, syntax, semantics and pragmatics. This volume shows that different theoretical frameworks may be brought fruitfully together in the effort to formulate new analyses of well-known problems. 03 00 This volume brings together scholars of diverse theoretical persuasions who all share an interest in capturing the role that nominal determination and reference assignment play in the complicated interplay between thought, language and communication. The articles can be divided roughly into five main areas of concern: the conceptual level of determination; the emergence and function of articles; their semantic contribution to nominal interpretation; the morphology and syntax of determiners; and the interplay and contrasts between articles, demonstratives and possessives. Thus, linguistic and philosophical issues in the subject field of nominal determination are addressed at all interface levels between morphology, syntax, semantics and pragmatics. This volume shows that different theoretical frameworks may be brought fruitfully together in the effort to formulate new analyses of well-known problems, but also to raise new questions and point to new areas which may prove interesting topics for future research both in functional and formal paradigms. 01 00 03 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/475/slcs.99.png 01 01 D502 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_jpg/9789027231109.jpg 01 01 D504 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_tif/9789027231109.tif 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_front/slcs.99.hb.png 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/125/slcs.99.png 02 00 03 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_back/slcs.99.hb.png 03 00 03 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/3d_web/slcs.99.hb.png 01 01 JB code slcs.99.01lis 06 10.1075/slcs.99.01lis vii viii 2 Miscellaneous 1 01 04 Contributors Contributors 01 eng 01 01 JB code slcs.99.02the 06 10.1075/slcs.99.02the ix ix 1 Miscellaneous 2 01 04 The editors The editors 01 eng 01 01 JB code slcs.99.02hoe 06 10.1075/slcs.99.02hoe xi xviii 8 Miscellaneous 3 01 04 Introduction Introduction 1 A01 01 JB code 309094988 Henrik Høeg Müller Høeg Müller, Henrik Henrik Høeg Müller 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/309094988 2 A01 01 JB code 364094989 Alex Klinge Klinge, Alex Alex Klinge 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/364094989 01 eng 30 00

This is a volume which brings together scholars of diverse theoretical persuasions who all share an interest in capturing the role that determination plays in nominals. There is a long tradition of exploring the role of determination in reference assignment and the interplay of determination with quantification. One of the primary functions of determination is to guide reference assignment, and in this way determination plays a central role in providing a link between thought, language, communication, and the world. The diversity of theoretical persuasions represented reflects the observation that different theoretical frameworks may be brought fruitfully together by a shared interest in research questions.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.03har 06 10.1075/slcs.99.03har 1 25 25 Article 4 01 04 Determiners and definiteness: Functional semantics and structural differentiation Determiners and definiteness: Functional semantics and structural differentiation 1 A01 01 JB code 580094990 Peter Harder Harder, Peter Peter Harder University of Copenhagen 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/580094990 01 eng 30 00

Both functional and formal approaches frequently suggest that structural and semantic categories ultimately match up (possibly even universally). They arrive at this result, however, via different descriptive strategies: most functionbased approaches set up structures primarily based on semantic/functional description, subsequently looking for distributional confirmation. Formal descriptions, on the other hand, primarily focus on distributional patterns, but often aim to show that these correspond to semantic distinctions. In contrast, I try to show that the determiner category comprises heterogeneous elements whose shared function must be understood as a result of a function-based structural pattern imposed top-down (partially arbitrary, partially motivated), which carves out a specific slot in the complex noun phrase for the basic ‘grounding’ choice between definite and indefinite reference.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.04her 06 10.1075/slcs.99.04her 27 43 17 Article 5 01 04 Articles, definite and indefinite Articles, definite and indefinite 1 A01 01 JB code 949094991 Michael Herslund Herslund, Michael Michael Herslund Copenhagen Business School 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/949094991 01 eng 30 00

In the Indo-European languages where a definite article exists, it is historically derived from a demonstrative pronoun. The hypothesis of this paper is that the origin of the definite article is the creation of noun phrase structure by the subordination of a noun to a demonstrative pronoun. This process is described for the Romance languages and Danish. In languages where an indefinite article exists, it is historically derived from the numeral ‘one’. This origin of the indefinite article points out two possible directions for its further evolution: it can continue as a quantifier or it can become a classifier. The quantifier road is illustrated by the plural of the indefinite article in Old French and Spanish, the classifier use by the two indefinite articles of Modern French. Definite and indefinite articles thus have different functions and values: definite articles are pronominal heads, indefinite articles are quantifiers or classifiers.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.05sta 06 10.1075/slcs.99.05sta 45 63 19 Article 6 01 04 Typological correlations in nominal determination in Romance Typological correlations in nominal determination in Romance 1 A01 01 JB code 133094992 Elisabeth Stark Stark, Elisabeth Elisabeth Stark University of Zurich 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/133094992 01 eng 30 00

This paper discusses divergences and significant typological correlations found in the family of Romance languages, specifically French, Italian and Spanish. It proposes to reinterpret the complex system of indefinite nominal determination in two central Romance languages, viz. French and Italian, which both feature an indefinite article and a partitive article, as a device of nominal classification in a broad sense, marking the conceptually important distinction between a single, contoured referent and a non-contoured substance. It is argued that this classification system arose when nominal declension in Latin, which differentiated these two referentially highly relevant cognitive concepts via overt gender and number affixes, was partially or completely lost. In contrast to modern central Romance languages, which require obligatory (indefinite) determination in almost every argument position, modern peripheral Romance languages like Romanian or Spanish, possessing a simpler and more flexible system of determination, developed a system of differential object marking in order to unambiguously indicate contoured and highly individualized referents in direct object position.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.06wil 06 10.1075/slcs.99.06wil 65 78 14 Article 7 01 04 A stranger in the house: The French article de A stranger in the house: The French article de 1 A01 01 JB code 399094993 Marc Wilmet Wilmet, Marc Marc Wilmet Université Libre de Bruxelles 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/399094993 01 eng 30 00

The present contribution argues in favour of the recognition of an article de in French which occurs either alone or with another article. The approach adopted calls for an historical recapitulation, i.e. “where does the article come from?”, a theoretical investigation, i.e. “what is an article?”, and the identification of an inventory, i.e. “what qualifies as an article?”. Finally, a table is provided which summarizes the articles in terms of three pairs of oppositions, viz. part vs. whole, mass vs. count, continuous vs. discontinuous. The article de is definable as a partitive article, sometimes mass or count, continuous or discontinuous (where the form is de), sometimes continuous mass (where the form is du, de la), sometimes discontinuous mass or count (where the form is des), sometimes continuous mass and count (where the form is d’un, d’une).

01 01 JB code slcs.99.07kor 06 10.1075/slcs.99.07kor 79 99 21 Article 8 01 04 Determination in endocentric and exocentric languages: With evidence primarily from Danish and Italian Determination in endocentric and exocentric languages: With evidence primarily from Danish and Italian 1 A01 01 JB code 722094994 Iørn Korzen Korzen, Iørn Iørn Korzen Copenhagen Business School 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/722094994 01 eng 30 00

In this paper it is argued that there is a correlation between lexico-semantic specificity and a tendency towards textual “promotion” of nouns (and, also, of verbs). Textually promoted nouns serve as “instantiators” of nominal “occurrences”, i.e. first, second or third order entities, and in order for a noun to instantiate an entity in a text, a coding of the feature [± identifiable to the hearer] is needed (possibly along with other features as well). In other words: generally, the noun must appear with a determiner. In fact, there is a general tendency for Romance nouns (which are lexically more specific than Germanic ones) to appear with a determiner, whereas Germanic nouns much more often appear undetermined and, possibly, incorporated in verbal or prepositional structures. The mentioned correlation hypothesis is substantiated with evidence mainly from Danish and Italian.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.08zam 06 10.1075/slcs.99.08zam 101 130 30 Article 9 01 04 Bare predicate nominals in Romance languages Bare predicate nominals in Romance languages 1 A01 01 JB code 627094995 Roberto Zamparelli Zamparelli, Roberto Roberto Zamparelli Università di Trento 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/627094995 01 eng 30 00

This paper offers an analysis for the possible absence of determiners in singular predicate nominals that refer to professions, roles and certain relations (e.g.dottore, capo-mafia, figlio di Luigi in Italian). Building on the theory of noun phrases in Heycock and Zamparelli (2005), it argues that while singular count nouns are normally licensed by the presence of a determiner, nouns that form bare predicates have an impoverished set of features (in particular, no set value for gender), and can be licensed by entering in an agreement relation with the subject of the predication. Semantically, the article distinguishes three subclasses of bare predicates, and argues that role / profession nouns ambiguously refer either to sets of individuals or to the activities which can identify these individuals.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.09leo 06 10.1075/slcs.99.09leo 131 162 32 Article 10 01 04 Definiteness effect and the role of the coda in existential constructions Definiteness effect and the role of the coda in existential constructions 1 A01 01 JB code 855094996 Manuel Leonetti Leonetti, Manuel Manuel Leonetti Universidad de Alcalá 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/855094996 01 eng 30 00

The Definiteness Effect (DE) in existential contexts appears as a robust constraint in some languages (Spanish) while it seems to be absent in others (Italian, Catalan). However, a closer inspection of Italian and Catalan data shows that the DE has some presence in those languages as well, when the coda of the existential is explicit and occurs inside the VP. This paper investigates the effects produced by the coda on definiteness, and connects such effects to other constraints on the licensing of postverbal subjects, all ultimately tied to nformation structure. I suggest that a classbetween definiteness and Focus structure is at the origin of the DE, when definite expressions resist insertion into pure thetic or Broad Focus sentences.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.10hoe 06 10.1075/slcs.99.10hoe 163 188 26 Article 11 01 04 Determination of N2 modifiers in Spanish nominal syntagmatic compounds Determination of N2 modifiers in Spanish nominal syntagmatic compounds 1 A01 01 JB code 184094997 Henrik Høeg Müller Høeg Müller, Henrik Henrik Høeg Müller Copenhagen Business School 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/184094997 01 eng 30 00

To many informants the semantic difference between the following two types of nominal syntagmatic compounds (NSCs) in Spanish seems almost undetectable or maybe even non-existent.

a. Crisis de la energía (energy crisis), crisis del petróleo (oil crisis), puesta del sol

(sun set)

[internal structure: N1prep. def.N2]

b. Fuente de energía (energy source), pozo de petróleo (oil well) día de sol (day

of sun)

[internal structure: N1 prep. ØN2]

However, I will claim that the two structure types are far from being synonymous. A fundamental assumption in the article is that conceptualisation of basic entity types as either heterogeneous, delimited and internally structured (bounded) or homogeneous, amorphous and without delimitation or internal structure (unbounded) interacts with the grammatical determiner system in attributing interpretational values to NSCs. The point of departure is that the definite article attributes to N2 either a referential reading or a prototype reading, while the zero determiner brings about an interpretation as either a mass or a concept. In the last part of the article it is argued that the semantic effects of the N2 configuration are essentially different from genericity. Nominals in existential or generic expressions denote, or are sometimes even said to refer to, a class or type of objects, whereas N2 gives access to characteristic properties of the entity type.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.11lon 06 10.1075/slcs.99.11lon 189 211 23 Article 12 01 04 Reference to individuals, person, and the variety of mapping parameters Reference to individuals, person, and the variety of mapping parameters 1 A01 01 JB code 15094998 Giuseppe Longobardi Longobardi, Giuseppe Giuseppe Longobardi Università di Trieste 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/15094998 01 eng 30 00

The paper addresses two related questions: whether the principle that nominal arguments must be projections of D, apparently holding in many Romance languages, holds in English and in other languages as well; and why such a principle should exist at all. The answer empirically suggested to the first question is that the principle does hold in English, contrary to Chierchia (1998) and supporting the N-movement approach to the nominal Romance-Germanic parametrization proposed by Longobardi (1996), but that certain other languages, specifically Japanese, are likely to exhibit nominal arguments without D, as expected in Chierchia’s (1998) framework. Following the restrictive approach to phrase structure proposed by Chomsky (1995, ch 4.), the second question will be addressed by identifying D with the Person head and by arguing that the latter feature is crucial to allow type-shifting from property- to individual-denotation. Under a minimalist theory of parameter formats, it will be argued that all the three possible polymorphic realizations of the feature Person admitted by such a theory are crosslinguistically instantiated, precisely by Japanese, English, and Italian.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.12ber 06 10.1075/slcs.99.12ber 213 232 20 Article 13 01 04 English th- forms English th- forms 1 A01 01 JB code 235094999 Judy B. Bernstein Bernstein, Judy B. Judy B. Bernstein William Paterson University 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/235094999 01 eng 30 00

This paper develops the idea that English words like the, they, this, and existentialthere share an initial th- morpheme, which is identified as a 3rd person marker unspecified for number and gender. Also developed is the proposal that person is a property of D (head of the functional projection “Determiner Phrase”). Not adopted is the idea that definiteness or deixis is inherently encoded in D, although the proposal is compatible with an approach that takes these features to be derivationally associated with D. The proposed analysis therefore departs from that of Lyons (1999), who argues that the features person and definiteness are conflated and simultaneously associated with D.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.13kli 06 10.1075/slcs.99.13kli 233 263 31 Article 14 01 04 Stating the case for th- root and hw- root determiners Stating the case for þ- root and hw- root determiners 1 A01 01 JB code 939095000 Alex Klinge Klinge, Alex Alex Klinge Copenhagen Business School 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/939095000 01 eng 30 00

In this article I will show that the existence of coherent classes of determiners based on pan-Germanic þ- and hw- roots, such as English ‘this’ and ‘which’ and German ‘diese’ and ‘welche’, make it necessary to reanalyse the syntactic classes and paradigmatic contrasts in the functional domain of Germanic DPs. It will be argued that the two þ- and hw- morphemes contain procedural semantics which encodes two contrasting ways that a referent may be identified for an index in a propositional form. I will focus on English and German, but reference will also be made to Danish.

As a first step it will be argued that there is no coherent syntactic class of articles. Then I will draw on etymological and comparative data, and on morphological and distributional facts to show that the two morphemes have been remarkably resilient across Germanic languages for more than a thousand years. Finally, I will anchor their resilience in their semantic and pragmatic raison d’être.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.14fuk 06 10.1075/slcs.99.14fuk 265 286 22 Article 15 01 04 On certain differences between noun phrases and clauses On certain differences between noun phrases and clauses 1 A01 01 JB code 235095001 Naoki Fukui Fukui, Naoki Naoki Fukui Sophia University 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/235095001 2 A01 01 JB code 441095002 Mihoko Zushi Zushi, Mihoko Mihoko Zushi Kanagawa University 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/441095002 01 eng 30 00

Along with the noted similarities that have prompted much important study in the development of the theory of phrase structure and movement, nouns and verbs (and their projections) exhibit remarkable differences. These differences have often been neglected or otherwise discredited in favor of the similarities that have been a target for novel proposals regarding the internal structures of noun phrases and clauses. This paper tries to pin down the locus of the differences, and identifies the fundamental difference between noun phrases and clauses as the fact that noun phrases (nominal expressions) have a singlelayered internal structure having a single phase and are completed (or “closed”) in terms of licensing of internal elements, whereas clauses have a double-layered internal structure with two internal phases one of which (vP) is not completed (or “open”) in the sense that outside probes (namely, C and C-T) play a role in determining the inner workings of vP. The paper argues in a preliminary form that from this fundamental difference (which itself seems to be rooted in considerations of the C-I interface, i.e., clauses are propositions while nominal expressions are typically arguments), various syntactic differences between the two classes of categories, particularly those with respect to A-movement and A’-movement, naturally follow.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.15dam 06 10.1075/slcs.99.15dam 287 308 22 Article 16 01 04 Determination, nominalisation and conceptual processing Determination, nominalisation and conceptual processing 1 A01 01 JB code 184095003 Helle Dam Jensen Dam Jensen, Helle Helle Dam Jensen Aarhus School of Business 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/184095003 01 eng 30 00

The purpose of this article is to account for the interpretive process initiated by nominalisations in Spanish. I shall start from the assumption that both morphological nominalisations and syntactic nominalisations, in which a determiner merges with either an infinitive phrase or a complementizer phrase, generate a complex interpretive process due to a clash between an interpretation in terms of ‘entity’, on the one hand, and an interpretation as ‘situation’, on the other. I shall substantiate this claim by analysing nominalised infinitive phrases, nominalised complementizer phrases and morphological nominalisations.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.16kle 06 10.1075/slcs.99.16kle 309 336 28 Article 17 01 04 The semantics and pragmatics of the possessive determiner The semantics and pragmatics of the possessive determiner 1 A01 01 JB code 855095004 Georges Kleiber Kleiber, Georges Georges Kleiber Université Marc Bloch 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/855095004 01 eng 30 00

“This article deals with the semantics and pragmatics of the possessive adjective in French. As a point of departure we do not base this article, as it is traditionally done, on the general semantic category of ‘possession’, but instead we take our point of departure in the competition of the possessive determiner and the definite article in the context of associative anaphors. This article shows firstly, that the possessive adjective requires an a priori dependant asymmetry between the two entities E1 and E2 which are implied by a possessive description, secondly, that this asymmetry is satisfied either by the ontological status of the entities involved; by the semantico-lexical relation between the Ns of the entities involved which indicate an a priori subordination; or by a discursive relation between two specific groups or classes of referents established by the linguistic or situational context.”

01 01 JB code slcs.99.17fre 06 10.1075/slcs.99.17fre 337 364 28 Article 18 01 04 Reference, determiners and descriptive content Reference, determiners and descriptive content 1 A01 01 JB code 184095005 Thorstein Fretheim Fretheim, Thorstein Thorstein Fretheim Norwegian University of Science and Technology 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/184095005 2 A01 01 JB code 374095006 Nana Aba Appiah Amfo Amfo, Nana Aba Appiah Nana Aba Appiah Amfo University of Ghana 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/374095006 01 eng 30 00

This paper starts out arguing that Gundel et al.’s claim that whatever a demonstrative can do, a definite article can do equally well is in need of revision. Then, against the tenor of Gundel et al.’s Givenness Hierarchy model, we postulate a univocal lexical meaning for determiners and corresponding pronouns in Norwegian, but we also show that what appears to be a conflation of definite article and distal demonstrative determiner in certain syntactic environments in Norwegian is two distinct linguistic phenomena in spoken Norwegian, and finally we argue that segmentally identical determiners and pronouns in the Niger-Congo language Akan are semantically distinct lexemes.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.19ind 06 10.1075/slcs.99.19ind 365 369 5 Miscellaneous 19 01 04 Index Index 01 eng
01 JB code JBENJAMINS John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 01 JB code JB John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 https://benjamins.com 02 https://benjamins.com/catalog/slcs.99 Amsterdam NL 00 John Benjamins Publishing Company Marketing Department / Karin Plijnaar, Pieter Lamers onix@benjamins.nl 04 01 00 20080709 C 2008 John Benjamins Publishing Company D 2008 John Benjamins Publishing Company 02 WORLD WORLD US CA MX 09 01 JB 1 John Benjamins Publishing Company +31 20 6304747 +31 20 6739773 bookorder@benjamins.nl 01 https://benjamins.com 21 23 16 01 00 Unqualified price 02 JB 1 02 110.00 EUR 02 00 Unqualified price 02 92.00 01 Z 0 GBP GB US CA MX 01 01 JB 2 John Benjamins Publishing Company +1 800 562-5666 +1 703 661-1501 benjamins@presswarehouse.com 01 https://benjamins.com 21 23 16 01 00 Unqualified price 02 JB 1 02 165.00 USD
84007391 03 01 01 JB code JB John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 JB code SLCS 99 Eb 15 9789027290304 06 10.1075/slcs.99 00 EA E107 10 01 JB code SLCS 02 0165-7763 02 99.00 01 02 Studies in Language Companion Series Studies in Language Companion Series 11 01 JB code jbe-all 01 02 Full EBA collection (ca. 4,200 titles) 11 01 JB code jbe-2015-all 01 02 Complete backlist (3,208 titles, 1967–2015) 05 02 Complete backlist (1967–2015) 11 01 JB code jbe-2015-linguistics 01 02 Subject collection: Linguistics (2,773 titles, 1967–2015) 05 02 Linguistics (1967–2015) 11 01 JB code jbe-2015-slcs 01 02 Studies in Language Companion Series (vols. 1–171, 1978–2015) 05 02 SLCS (vols. 1–171, 1978–2015) 11 01 JB code jbe-2015-pragmatics 01 02 Subject collection: Pragmatics (804 titles, 1978–2015) 05 02 Pragmatics (1978–2015) 01 01 Essays on Nominal Determination From morphology to discourse management Essays on Nominal Determination: From morphology to discourse management 1 B01 01 JB code 284093373 Henrik Høeg Müller Høeg Müller, Henrik Henrik Høeg Müller Copenhagen Business School 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/284093373 2 B01 01 JB code 485093374 Alex Klinge Klinge, Alex Alex Klinge Copenhagen Business School 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/485093374 01 eng 11 392 03 03 xviii 03 00 369 03 01 22 415 03 2008 P299.D48 04 Grammar, Comparative and general--Determiners. 04 Definiteness (Linguistics) 10 LAN009000 12 CFK 24 JB code LIN.DISC Discourse studies 24 JB code LIN.PRAG Pragmatics 24 JB code LIN.SEMAN Semantics 24 JB code LIN.THEOR Theoretical linguistics 01 06 02 00 Addresses the linguistic and philosophical issues in the subject field of nominal determination at various interface levels between morphology, syntax, semantics and pragmatics. This volume shows that different theoretical frameworks may be brought fruitfully together in the effort to formulate new analyses of well-known problems. 03 00 This volume brings together scholars of diverse theoretical persuasions who all share an interest in capturing the role that nominal determination and reference assignment play in the complicated interplay between thought, language and communication. The articles can be divided roughly into five main areas of concern: the conceptual level of determination; the emergence and function of articles; their semantic contribution to nominal interpretation; the morphology and syntax of determiners; and the interplay and contrasts between articles, demonstratives and possessives. Thus, linguistic and philosophical issues in the subject field of nominal determination are addressed at all interface levels between morphology, syntax, semantics and pragmatics. This volume shows that different theoretical frameworks may be brought fruitfully together in the effort to formulate new analyses of well-known problems, but also to raise new questions and point to new areas which may prove interesting topics for future research both in functional and formal paradigms. 01 00 03 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/475/slcs.99.png 01 01 D502 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_jpg/9789027231109.jpg 01 01 D504 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_tif/9789027231109.tif 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_front/slcs.99.hb.png 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/125/slcs.99.png 02 00 03 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_back/slcs.99.hb.png 03 00 03 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/3d_web/slcs.99.hb.png 01 01 JB code slcs.99.01lis 06 10.1075/slcs.99.01lis vii viii 2 Miscellaneous 1 01 04 Contributors Contributors 01 eng 01 01 JB code slcs.99.02the 06 10.1075/slcs.99.02the ix ix 1 Miscellaneous 2 01 04 The editors The editors 01 eng 01 01 JB code slcs.99.02hoe 06 10.1075/slcs.99.02hoe xi xviii 8 Miscellaneous 3 01 04 Introduction Introduction 1 A01 01 JB code 309094988 Henrik Høeg Müller Høeg Müller, Henrik Henrik Høeg Müller 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/309094988 2 A01 01 JB code 364094989 Alex Klinge Klinge, Alex Alex Klinge 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/364094989 01 eng 30 00

This is a volume which brings together scholars of diverse theoretical persuasions who all share an interest in capturing the role that determination plays in nominals. There is a long tradition of exploring the role of determination in reference assignment and the interplay of determination with quantification. One of the primary functions of determination is to guide reference assignment, and in this way determination plays a central role in providing a link between thought, language, communication, and the world. The diversity of theoretical persuasions represented reflects the observation that different theoretical frameworks may be brought fruitfully together by a shared interest in research questions.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.03har 06 10.1075/slcs.99.03har 1 25 25 Article 4 01 04 Determiners and definiteness: Functional semantics and structural differentiation Determiners and definiteness: Functional semantics and structural differentiation 1 A01 01 JB code 580094990 Peter Harder Harder, Peter Peter Harder University of Copenhagen 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/580094990 01 eng 30 00

Both functional and formal approaches frequently suggest that structural and semantic categories ultimately match up (possibly even universally). They arrive at this result, however, via different descriptive strategies: most functionbased approaches set up structures primarily based on semantic/functional description, subsequently looking for distributional confirmation. Formal descriptions, on the other hand, primarily focus on distributional patterns, but often aim to show that these correspond to semantic distinctions. In contrast, I try to show that the determiner category comprises heterogeneous elements whose shared function must be understood as a result of a function-based structural pattern imposed top-down (partially arbitrary, partially motivated), which carves out a specific slot in the complex noun phrase for the basic ‘grounding’ choice between definite and indefinite reference.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.04her 06 10.1075/slcs.99.04her 27 43 17 Article 5 01 04 Articles, definite and indefinite Articles, definite and indefinite 1 A01 01 JB code 949094991 Michael Herslund Herslund, Michael Michael Herslund Copenhagen Business School 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/949094991 01 eng 30 00

In the Indo-European languages where a definite article exists, it is historically derived from a demonstrative pronoun. The hypothesis of this paper is that the origin of the definite article is the creation of noun phrase structure by the subordination of a noun to a demonstrative pronoun. This process is described for the Romance languages and Danish. In languages where an indefinite article exists, it is historically derived from the numeral ‘one’. This origin of the indefinite article points out two possible directions for its further evolution: it can continue as a quantifier or it can become a classifier. The quantifier road is illustrated by the plural of the indefinite article in Old French and Spanish, the classifier use by the two indefinite articles of Modern French. Definite and indefinite articles thus have different functions and values: definite articles are pronominal heads, indefinite articles are quantifiers or classifiers.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.05sta 06 10.1075/slcs.99.05sta 45 63 19 Article 6 01 04 Typological correlations in nominal determination in Romance Typological correlations in nominal determination in Romance 1 A01 01 JB code 133094992 Elisabeth Stark Stark, Elisabeth Elisabeth Stark University of Zurich 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/133094992 01 eng 30 00

This paper discusses divergences and significant typological correlations found in the family of Romance languages, specifically French, Italian and Spanish. It proposes to reinterpret the complex system of indefinite nominal determination in two central Romance languages, viz. French and Italian, which both feature an indefinite article and a partitive article, as a device of nominal classification in a broad sense, marking the conceptually important distinction between a single, contoured referent and a non-contoured substance. It is argued that this classification system arose when nominal declension in Latin, which differentiated these two referentially highly relevant cognitive concepts via overt gender and number affixes, was partially or completely lost. In contrast to modern central Romance languages, which require obligatory (indefinite) determination in almost every argument position, modern peripheral Romance languages like Romanian or Spanish, possessing a simpler and more flexible system of determination, developed a system of differential object marking in order to unambiguously indicate contoured and highly individualized referents in direct object position.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.06wil 06 10.1075/slcs.99.06wil 65 78 14 Article 7 01 04 A stranger in the house: The French article de A stranger in the house: The French article de 1 A01 01 JB code 399094993 Marc Wilmet Wilmet, Marc Marc Wilmet Université Libre de Bruxelles 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/399094993 01 eng 30 00

The present contribution argues in favour of the recognition of an article de in French which occurs either alone or with another article. The approach adopted calls for an historical recapitulation, i.e. “where does the article come from?”, a theoretical investigation, i.e. “what is an article?”, and the identification of an inventory, i.e. “what qualifies as an article?”. Finally, a table is provided which summarizes the articles in terms of three pairs of oppositions, viz. part vs. whole, mass vs. count, continuous vs. discontinuous. The article de is definable as a partitive article, sometimes mass or count, continuous or discontinuous (where the form is de), sometimes continuous mass (where the form is du, de la), sometimes discontinuous mass or count (where the form is des), sometimes continuous mass and count (where the form is d’un, d’une).

01 01 JB code slcs.99.07kor 06 10.1075/slcs.99.07kor 79 99 21 Article 8 01 04 Determination in endocentric and exocentric languages: With evidence primarily from Danish and Italian Determination in endocentric and exocentric languages: With evidence primarily from Danish and Italian 1 A01 01 JB code 722094994 Iørn Korzen Korzen, Iørn Iørn Korzen Copenhagen Business School 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/722094994 01 eng 30 00

In this paper it is argued that there is a correlation between lexico-semantic specificity and a tendency towards textual “promotion” of nouns (and, also, of verbs). Textually promoted nouns serve as “instantiators” of nominal “occurrences”, i.e. first, second or third order entities, and in order for a noun to instantiate an entity in a text, a coding of the feature [± identifiable to the hearer] is needed (possibly along with other features as well). In other words: generally, the noun must appear with a determiner. In fact, there is a general tendency for Romance nouns (which are lexically more specific than Germanic ones) to appear with a determiner, whereas Germanic nouns much more often appear undetermined and, possibly, incorporated in verbal or prepositional structures. The mentioned correlation hypothesis is substantiated with evidence mainly from Danish and Italian.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.08zam 06 10.1075/slcs.99.08zam 101 130 30 Article 9 01 04 Bare predicate nominals in Romance languages Bare predicate nominals in Romance languages 1 A01 01 JB code 627094995 Roberto Zamparelli Zamparelli, Roberto Roberto Zamparelli Università di Trento 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/627094995 01 eng 30 00

This paper offers an analysis for the possible absence of determiners in singular predicate nominals that refer to professions, roles and certain relations (e.g.dottore, capo-mafia, figlio di Luigi in Italian). Building on the theory of noun phrases in Heycock and Zamparelli (2005), it argues that while singular count nouns are normally licensed by the presence of a determiner, nouns that form bare predicates have an impoverished set of features (in particular, no set value for gender), and can be licensed by entering in an agreement relation with the subject of the predication. Semantically, the article distinguishes three subclasses of bare predicates, and argues that role / profession nouns ambiguously refer either to sets of individuals or to the activities which can identify these individuals.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.09leo 06 10.1075/slcs.99.09leo 131 162 32 Article 10 01 04 Definiteness effect and the role of the coda in existential constructions Definiteness effect and the role of the coda in existential constructions 1 A01 01 JB code 855094996 Manuel Leonetti Leonetti, Manuel Manuel Leonetti Universidad de Alcalá 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/855094996 01 eng 30 00

The Definiteness Effect (DE) in existential contexts appears as a robust constraint in some languages (Spanish) while it seems to be absent in others (Italian, Catalan). However, a closer inspection of Italian and Catalan data shows that the DE has some presence in those languages as well, when the coda of the existential is explicit and occurs inside the VP. This paper investigates the effects produced by the coda on definiteness, and connects such effects to other constraints on the licensing of postverbal subjects, all ultimately tied to nformation structure. I suggest that a classbetween definiteness and Focus structure is at the origin of the DE, when definite expressions resist insertion into pure thetic or Broad Focus sentences.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.10hoe 06 10.1075/slcs.99.10hoe 163 188 26 Article 11 01 04 Determination of N2 modifiers in Spanish nominal syntagmatic compounds Determination of N2 modifiers in Spanish nominal syntagmatic compounds 1 A01 01 JB code 184094997 Henrik Høeg Müller Høeg Müller, Henrik Henrik Høeg Müller Copenhagen Business School 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/184094997 01 eng 30 00

To many informants the semantic difference between the following two types of nominal syntagmatic compounds (NSCs) in Spanish seems almost undetectable or maybe even non-existent.

a. Crisis de la energía (energy crisis), crisis del petróleo (oil crisis), puesta del sol

(sun set)

[internal structure: N1prep. def.N2]

b. Fuente de energía (energy source), pozo de petróleo (oil well) día de sol (day

of sun)

[internal structure: N1 prep. ØN2]

However, I will claim that the two structure types are far from being synonymous. A fundamental assumption in the article is that conceptualisation of basic entity types as either heterogeneous, delimited and internally structured (bounded) or homogeneous, amorphous and without delimitation or internal structure (unbounded) interacts with the grammatical determiner system in attributing interpretational values to NSCs. The point of departure is that the definite article attributes to N2 either a referential reading or a prototype reading, while the zero determiner brings about an interpretation as either a mass or a concept. In the last part of the article it is argued that the semantic effects of the N2 configuration are essentially different from genericity. Nominals in existential or generic expressions denote, or are sometimes even said to refer to, a class or type of objects, whereas N2 gives access to characteristic properties of the entity type.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.11lon 06 10.1075/slcs.99.11lon 189 211 23 Article 12 01 04 Reference to individuals, person, and the variety of mapping parameters Reference to individuals, person, and the variety of mapping parameters 1 A01 01 JB code 15094998 Giuseppe Longobardi Longobardi, Giuseppe Giuseppe Longobardi Università di Trieste 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/15094998 01 eng 30 00

The paper addresses two related questions: whether the principle that nominal arguments must be projections of D, apparently holding in many Romance languages, holds in English and in other languages as well; and why such a principle should exist at all. The answer empirically suggested to the first question is that the principle does hold in English, contrary to Chierchia (1998) and supporting the N-movement approach to the nominal Romance-Germanic parametrization proposed by Longobardi (1996), but that certain other languages, specifically Japanese, are likely to exhibit nominal arguments without D, as expected in Chierchia’s (1998) framework. Following the restrictive approach to phrase structure proposed by Chomsky (1995, ch 4.), the second question will be addressed by identifying D with the Person head and by arguing that the latter feature is crucial to allow type-shifting from property- to individual-denotation. Under a minimalist theory of parameter formats, it will be argued that all the three possible polymorphic realizations of the feature Person admitted by such a theory are crosslinguistically instantiated, precisely by Japanese, English, and Italian.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.12ber 06 10.1075/slcs.99.12ber 213 232 20 Article 13 01 04 English th- forms English th- forms 1 A01 01 JB code 235094999 Judy B. Bernstein Bernstein, Judy B. Judy B. Bernstein William Paterson University 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/235094999 01 eng 30 00

This paper develops the idea that English words like the, they, this, and existentialthere share an initial th- morpheme, which is identified as a 3rd person marker unspecified for number and gender. Also developed is the proposal that person is a property of D (head of the functional projection “Determiner Phrase”). Not adopted is the idea that definiteness or deixis is inherently encoded in D, although the proposal is compatible with an approach that takes these features to be derivationally associated with D. The proposed analysis therefore departs from that of Lyons (1999), who argues that the features person and definiteness are conflated and simultaneously associated with D.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.13kli 06 10.1075/slcs.99.13kli 233 263 31 Article 14 01 04 Stating the case for th- root and hw- root determiners Stating the case for þ- root and hw- root determiners 1 A01 01 JB code 939095000 Alex Klinge Klinge, Alex Alex Klinge Copenhagen Business School 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/939095000 01 eng 30 00

In this article I will show that the existence of coherent classes of determiners based on pan-Germanic þ- and hw- roots, such as English ‘this’ and ‘which’ and German ‘diese’ and ‘welche’, make it necessary to reanalyse the syntactic classes and paradigmatic contrasts in the functional domain of Germanic DPs. It will be argued that the two þ- and hw- morphemes contain procedural semantics which encodes two contrasting ways that a referent may be identified for an index in a propositional form. I will focus on English and German, but reference will also be made to Danish.

As a first step it will be argued that there is no coherent syntactic class of articles. Then I will draw on etymological and comparative data, and on morphological and distributional facts to show that the two morphemes have been remarkably resilient across Germanic languages for more than a thousand years. Finally, I will anchor their resilience in their semantic and pragmatic raison d’être.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.14fuk 06 10.1075/slcs.99.14fuk 265 286 22 Article 15 01 04 On certain differences between noun phrases and clauses On certain differences between noun phrases and clauses 1 A01 01 JB code 235095001 Naoki Fukui Fukui, Naoki Naoki Fukui Sophia University 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/235095001 2 A01 01 JB code 441095002 Mihoko Zushi Zushi, Mihoko Mihoko Zushi Kanagawa University 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/441095002 01 eng 30 00

Along with the noted similarities that have prompted much important study in the development of the theory of phrase structure and movement, nouns and verbs (and their projections) exhibit remarkable differences. These differences have often been neglected or otherwise discredited in favor of the similarities that have been a target for novel proposals regarding the internal structures of noun phrases and clauses. This paper tries to pin down the locus of the differences, and identifies the fundamental difference between noun phrases and clauses as the fact that noun phrases (nominal expressions) have a singlelayered internal structure having a single phase and are completed (or “closed”) in terms of licensing of internal elements, whereas clauses have a double-layered internal structure with two internal phases one of which (vP) is not completed (or “open”) in the sense that outside probes (namely, C and C-T) play a role in determining the inner workings of vP. The paper argues in a preliminary form that from this fundamental difference (which itself seems to be rooted in considerations of the C-I interface, i.e., clauses are propositions while nominal expressions are typically arguments), various syntactic differences between the two classes of categories, particularly those with respect to A-movement and A’-movement, naturally follow.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.15dam 06 10.1075/slcs.99.15dam 287 308 22 Article 16 01 04 Determination, nominalisation and conceptual processing Determination, nominalisation and conceptual processing 1 A01 01 JB code 184095003 Helle Dam Jensen Dam Jensen, Helle Helle Dam Jensen Aarhus School of Business 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/184095003 01 eng 30 00

The purpose of this article is to account for the interpretive process initiated by nominalisations in Spanish. I shall start from the assumption that both morphological nominalisations and syntactic nominalisations, in which a determiner merges with either an infinitive phrase or a complementizer phrase, generate a complex interpretive process due to a clash between an interpretation in terms of ‘entity’, on the one hand, and an interpretation as ‘situation’, on the other. I shall substantiate this claim by analysing nominalised infinitive phrases, nominalised complementizer phrases and morphological nominalisations.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.16kle 06 10.1075/slcs.99.16kle 309 336 28 Article 17 01 04 The semantics and pragmatics of the possessive determiner The semantics and pragmatics of the possessive determiner 1 A01 01 JB code 855095004 Georges Kleiber Kleiber, Georges Georges Kleiber Université Marc Bloch 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/855095004 01 eng 30 00

“This article deals with the semantics and pragmatics of the possessive adjective in French. As a point of departure we do not base this article, as it is traditionally done, on the general semantic category of ‘possession’, but instead we take our point of departure in the competition of the possessive determiner and the definite article in the context of associative anaphors. This article shows firstly, that the possessive adjective requires an a priori dependant asymmetry between the two entities E1 and E2 which are implied by a possessive description, secondly, that this asymmetry is satisfied either by the ontological status of the entities involved; by the semantico-lexical relation between the Ns of the entities involved which indicate an a priori subordination; or by a discursive relation between two specific groups or classes of referents established by the linguistic or situational context.”

01 01 JB code slcs.99.17fre 06 10.1075/slcs.99.17fre 337 364 28 Article 18 01 04 Reference, determiners and descriptive content Reference, determiners and descriptive content 1 A01 01 JB code 184095005 Thorstein Fretheim Fretheim, Thorstein Thorstein Fretheim Norwegian University of Science and Technology 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/184095005 2 A01 01 JB code 374095006 Nana Aba Appiah Amfo Amfo, Nana Aba Appiah Nana Aba Appiah Amfo University of Ghana 07 https://benjamins.com/catalog/persons/374095006 01 eng 30 00

This paper starts out arguing that Gundel et al.’s claim that whatever a demonstrative can do, a definite article can do equally well is in need of revision. Then, against the tenor of Gundel et al.’s Givenness Hierarchy model, we postulate a univocal lexical meaning for determiners and corresponding pronouns in Norwegian, but we also show that what appears to be a conflation of definite article and distal demonstrative determiner in certain syntactic environments in Norwegian is two distinct linguistic phenomena in spoken Norwegian, and finally we argue that segmentally identical determiners and pronouns in the Niger-Congo language Akan are semantically distinct lexemes.

01 01 JB code slcs.99.19ind 06 10.1075/slcs.99.19ind 365 369 5 Miscellaneous 19 01 04 Index Index 01 eng
01 JB code JBENJAMINS John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 01 JB code JB John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 https://benjamins.com 02 https://benjamins.com/catalog/slcs.99 Amsterdam NL 00 John Benjamins Publishing Company Marketing Department / Karin Plijnaar, Pieter Lamers onix@benjamins.nl 04 01 00 20080709 C 2008 John Benjamins Publishing Company D 2008 John Benjamins Publishing Company 02 WORLD 13 15 9789027231109 WORLD 09 01 JB 3 John Benjamins e-Platform 03 https://jbe-platform.com 29 https://jbe-platform.com/content/books/9789027290304 21 01 00 Unqualified price 02 110.00 EUR 01 00 Unqualified price 02 92.00 GBP GB 01 00 Unqualified price 02 165.00 USD
801014196 03 01 01 JB code JB John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 JB code SLCS 99 GE 15 9789027290304 06 10.1075/slcs.99 00 EA E133 10 01 JB code SLCS 02 JB code 0165-7763 02 99.00 01 02 Studies in Language Companion Series Studies in Language Companion Series 01 01 Essays on Nominal Determination Essays on Nominal Determination 1 B01 01 JB code 284093373 Henrik Høeg Müller Høeg Müller, Henrik Henrik Høeg Müller Copenhagen Business School 2 B01 01 JB code 485093374 Alex Klinge Klinge, Alex Alex Klinge Copenhagen Business School 01 eng 11 392 03 03 xviii 03 00 369 03 24 JB code LIN.DISC Discourse studies 24 JB code LIN.PRAG Pragmatics 24 JB code LIN.SEMAN Semantics 24 JB code LIN.THEOR Theoretical linguistics 10 LAN009000 12 CFK 01 06 02 00 Addresses the linguistic and philosophical issues in the subject field of nominal determination at various interface levels between morphology, syntax, semantics and pragmatics. This volume shows that different theoretical frameworks may be brought fruitfully together in the effort to formulate new analyses of well-known problems. 03 00 This volume brings together scholars of diverse theoretical persuasions who all share an interest in capturing the role that nominal determination and reference assignment play in the complicated interplay between thought, language and communication. The articles can be divided roughly into five main areas of concern: the conceptual level of determination; the emergence and function of articles; their semantic contribution to nominal interpretation; the morphology and syntax of determiners; and the interplay and contrasts between articles, demonstratives and possessives. Thus, linguistic and philosophical issues in the subject field of nominal determination are addressed at all interface levels between morphology, syntax, semantics and pragmatics. This volume shows that different theoretical frameworks may be brought fruitfully together in the effort to formulate new analyses of well-known problems, but also to raise new questions and point to new areas which may prove interesting topics for future research both in functional and formal paradigms. 01 00 03 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/475/slcs.99.png 01 01 D502 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_jpg/9789027231109.jpg 01 01 D504 https://benjamins.com/covers/475_tif/9789027231109.tif 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_front/slcs.99.hb.png 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/125/slcs.99.png 02 00 03 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/1200_back/slcs.99.hb.png 03 00 03 01 01 D503 https://benjamins.com/covers/3d_web/slcs.99.hb.png 01 01 JB code slcs.99.01lis 06 10.1075/slcs.99.01lis vii viii 2 Miscellaneous 1 01 04 Contributors Contributors 01 01 JB code slcs.99.02the 06 10.1075/slcs.99.02the ix ix 1 Miscellaneous 2 01 04 The editors The editors 01 01 JB code slcs.99.02hoe 06 10.1075/slcs.99.02hoe xi xviii 8 Miscellaneous 3 01 04 Introduction Introduction 1 A01 01 JB code 309094988 Henrik Høeg Müller Høeg Müller, Henrik Henrik Høeg Müller 2 A01 01 JB code 364094989 Alex Klinge Klinge, Alex Alex Klinge 01 01 JB code slcs.99.03har 06 10.1075/slcs.99.03har 1 25 25 Article 4 01 04 Determiners and definiteness: Functional semantics and structural differentiation Determiners and definiteness: Functional semantics and structural differentiation 1 A01 01 JB code 580094990 Peter Harder Harder, Peter Peter Harder University of Copenhagen 01 01 JB code slcs.99.04her 06 10.1075/slcs.99.04her 27 43 17 Article 5 01 04 Articles, definite and indefinite Articles, definite and indefinite 1 A01 01 JB code 949094991 Michael Herslund Herslund, Michael Michael Herslund Copenhagen Business School 01 01 JB code slcs.99.05sta 06 10.1075/slcs.99.05sta 45 63 19 Article 6 01 04 Typological correlations in nominal determination in Romance Typological correlations in nominal determination in Romance 1 A01 01 JB code 133094992 Elisabeth Stark Stark, Elisabeth Elisabeth Stark University of Zurich 01 01 JB code slcs.99.06wil 06 10.1075/slcs.99.06wil 65 78 14 Article 7 01 04 A stranger in the house: The French article de A stranger in the house: The French article de 1 A01 01 JB code 399094993 Marc Wilmet Wilmet, Marc Marc Wilmet Université Libre de Bruxelles 01 01 JB code slcs.99.07kor 06 10.1075/slcs.99.07kor 79 99 21 Article 8 01 04 Determination in endocentric and exocentric languages: With evidence primarily from Danish and Italian Determination in endocentric and exocentric languages: With evidence primarily from Danish and Italian 1 A01 01 JB code 722094994 Iørn Korzen Korzen, Iørn Iørn Korzen Copenhagen Business School 01 01 JB code slcs.99.08zam 06 10.1075/slcs.99.08zam 101 130 30 Article 9 01 04 Bare predicate nominals in Romance languages Bare predicate nominals in Romance languages 1 A01 01 JB code 627094995 Roberto Zamparelli Zamparelli, Roberto Roberto Zamparelli Università di Trento 01 01 JB code slcs.99.09leo 06 10.1075/slcs.99.09leo 131 162 32 Article 10 01 04 Definiteness effect and the role of the coda in existential constructions Definiteness effect and the role of the coda in existential constructions 1 A01 01 JB code 855094996 Manuel Leonetti Leonetti, Manuel Manuel Leonetti Universidad de Alcalá 01 01 JB code slcs.99.10hoe 06 10.1075/slcs.99.10hoe 163 188 26 Article 11 01 04 Determination of N2 modifiers in Spanish nominal syntagmatic compounds Determination of N2 modifiers in Spanish nominal syntagmatic compounds 1 A01 01 JB code 184094997 Henrik Høeg Müller Høeg Müller, Henrik Henrik Høeg Müller Copenhagen Business School 01 01 JB code slcs.99.11lon 06 10.1075/slcs.99.11lon 189 211 23 Article 12 01 04 Reference to individuals, person, and the variety of mapping parameters Reference to individuals, person, and the variety of mapping parameters 1 A01 01 JB code 15094998 Giuseppe Longobardi Longobardi, Giuseppe Giuseppe Longobardi Università di Trieste 01 01 JB code slcs.99.12ber 06 10.1075/slcs.99.12ber 213 232 20 Article 13 01 04 English th- forms English th- forms 1 A01 01 JB code 235094999 Judy B. Bernstein Bernstein, Judy B. Judy B. Bernstein William Paterson University 01 01 JB code slcs.99.13kli 06 10.1075/slcs.99.13kli 233 263 31 Article 14 01 04 Stating the case for th- root and hw- root determiners Stating the case for þ- root and hw- root determiners 1 A01 01 JB code 939095000 Alex Klinge Klinge, Alex Alex Klinge Copenhagen Business School 01 01 JB code slcs.99.14fuk 06 10.1075/slcs.99.14fuk 265 286 22 Article 15 01 04 On certain differences between noun phrases and clauses On certain differences between noun phrases and clauses 1 A01 01 JB code 235095001 Naoki Fukui Fukui, Naoki Naoki Fukui Sophia University 2 A01 01 JB code 441095002 Mihoko Zushi Zushi, Mihoko Mihoko Zushi Kanagawa University 01 01 JB code slcs.99.15dam 06 10.1075/slcs.99.15dam 287 308 22 Article 16 01 04 Determination, nominalisation and conceptual processing Determination, nominalisation and conceptual processing 1 A01 01 JB code 184095003 Helle Dam Jensen Dam Jensen, Helle Helle Dam Jensen Aarhus School of Business 01 01 JB code slcs.99.16kle 06 10.1075/slcs.99.16kle 309 336 28 Article 17 01 04 The semantics and pragmatics of the possessive determiner The semantics and pragmatics of the possessive determiner 1 A01 01 JB code 855095004 Georges Kleiber Kleiber, Georges Georges Kleiber Université Marc Bloch 01 01 JB code slcs.99.17fre 06 10.1075/slcs.99.17fre 337 364 28 Article 18 01 04 Reference, determiners and descriptive content Reference, determiners and descriptive content 1 A01 01 JB code 184095005 Thorstein Fretheim Fretheim, Thorstein Thorstein Fretheim Norwegian University of Science and Technology 2 A01 01 JB code 374095006 Nana Aba Appiah Amfo Amfo, Nana Aba Appiah Nana Aba Appiah Amfo University of Ghana 01 01 JB code slcs.99.19ind 06 10.1075/slcs.99.19ind 365 369 5 Miscellaneous 19 01 04 Index Index 01 JB code JBENJAMINS John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 01 JB code JB John Benjamins Publishing Company 01 https://benjamins.com Amsterdam NL 00 John Benjamins Publishing Company Marketing Department / Karin Plijnaar, Pieter Lamers onix@benjamins.nl 04 01 00 20080709 C 2008 John Benjamins Publishing Company D 2008 John Benjamins Publishing Company 02 WORLD 13 15 9789027231109 WORLD 03 01 JB 17 Google 03 https://play.google.com/store/books 21 01 00 Unqualified price 00 110.00 EUR 01 00 Unqualified price 00 92.00 GBP 01 00 Unqualified price 00 165.00 USD