Functional Entities —and that ain’t the half of it!

Like many other languages, Spanish may specify fractionary nouns with definite articles (cf. la mitad). This fact seems to violate the presupposition of uniqueness generally assigned to the definite article, as no fraction may exist without another one (halves, in particular, come in pairs). But thi...

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Autor principal: Almerindo E. Ojeda
Formato: article
Lenguaje:CA
EN
Publicado: Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona 2004
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/28e0a489c969433ba647f73079b85236
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:28e0a489c969433ba647f73079b852362021-11-27T10:49:14ZFunctional Entities —and that ain’t the half of it!10.5565/rev/catjl.1081695-68852014-9719https://doaj.org/article/28e0a489c969433ba647f73079b852362004-12-01T00:00:00Zhttps://revistes.uab.cat/catJL/article/view/108https://doaj.org/toc/1695-6885https://doaj.org/toc/2014-9719Like many other languages, Spanish may specify fractionary nouns with definite articles (cf. la mitad). This fact seems to violate the presupposition of uniqueness generally assigned to the definite article, as no fraction may exist without another one (halves, in particular, come in pairs). But this violation is only apparent—at least if we assume that these fractionary nouns denote fractioning operations (rather than the results thereof) and occur in partitive (rather than attributive) constructions. These proposals can be justified independently, and extend to numeral noun constructions that did not survive into Contemporary Spanish.Almerindo E. OjedaUniversitat Autònoma de Barcelonaarticledefinite articlepresupposition of uniquenessfractionary nounsnumeral nounspartitive constructionattributive constructionPhilology. LinguisticsP1-1091CAENCatalan Journal of Linguistics, Vol 3, Iss 1 (2004)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language CA
EN
topic definite article
presupposition of uniqueness
fractionary nouns
numeral nouns
partitive construction
attributive construction
Philology. Linguistics
P1-1091
spellingShingle definite article
presupposition of uniqueness
fractionary nouns
numeral nouns
partitive construction
attributive construction
Philology. Linguistics
P1-1091
Almerindo E. Ojeda
Functional Entities —and that ain’t the half of it!
description Like many other languages, Spanish may specify fractionary nouns with definite articles (cf. la mitad). This fact seems to violate the presupposition of uniqueness generally assigned to the definite article, as no fraction may exist without another one (halves, in particular, come in pairs). But this violation is only apparent—at least if we assume that these fractionary nouns denote fractioning operations (rather than the results thereof) and occur in partitive (rather than attributive) constructions. These proposals can be justified independently, and extend to numeral noun constructions that did not survive into Contemporary Spanish.
format article
author Almerindo E. Ojeda
author_facet Almerindo E. Ojeda
author_sort Almerindo E. Ojeda
title Functional Entities —and that ain’t the half of it!
title_short Functional Entities —and that ain’t the half of it!
title_full Functional Entities —and that ain’t the half of it!
title_fullStr Functional Entities —and that ain’t the half of it!
title_full_unstemmed Functional Entities —and that ain’t the half of it!
title_sort functional entities —and that ain’t the half of it!
publisher Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
publishDate 2004
url https://doaj.org/article/28e0a489c969433ba647f73079b85236
work_keys_str_mv AT almerindoeojeda functionalentitiesandthataintthehalfofit
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