LINGUIST List 17.3023

Sun Oct 15 2006

Diss: Linguistic Theories/Morphology/Syntax: Billings: 'Approximati...'

Editor for this issue: Hannah Morales <hannahlinguistlist.org>


Directory         1.    Loren Billings, Approximation in Russian and the Single-Word Constraint


Message 1: Approximation in Russian and the Single-Word Constraint
Date: 13-Oct-2006
From: Loren Billings <billingsncnu.edu.tw>
Subject: Approximation in Russian and the Single-Word Constraint


Institution: Princeton University Program: Slavic Languages Dissertation Status: Completed Degree Date: 1995

Author: Loren A. Billings

Dissertation Title: Approximation in Russian and the Single-Word Constraint

Dissertation URL: http://roa.rutgers.edu

Linguistic Field(s): Linguistic Theories                             Morphology                             Syntax
Subject Language(s): Russian (rus)
Dissertation Director:
Leonard H. Babby
Dissertation Abstract:

Russian quantifiers are known for their complexity. This dissertationinvestigates expressions of indefinite quantity--specifically,accusative-assigning 'about' of approximate measure.

This preposition has undergone a somewhat unique diachronic change whichnow requires that its complement consist of only a single word. I chroniclethe advent of the single-word restriction (LONE-WD), showing historicaldata with multi-word complements of s. Adjective-noun and numeral-nouncomplements were once attested; Russian now requires only one word after .

This study investigates various apparent exceptions to LONE-WD, which areviolated only under very specific circumstances. These exceptions clarifythe morphosyntax of-- paucal numerals ('two' through 'four' and the fractions 'half' and <ˇcetvert'> 'quarter'),-- 'prequantifier' adjectives,-- syntactic compounds (adjective-noun sequences which inflect separately but are treated by the syntax as a single word), and-- large-quantity numbers ( 'thousand' and greater).

Distributions of special genitive-singular and -plural forms, assigned onlyby quantifiers, are shown to be distinct: Only paucal numerals inmorphological nominative case assign 'ADPAUCAL' genitive-singular forms(such as end-stressed <ˇcaSA> 'hours'); a number of elements, not justnumerals, trigger 'COUNT' genitive-plural forms (<ˇcelovek> 'people').Other constructions discussed include 'approximately',approximative inversion, <`etak> 'about', and 'several':

Quantification is not a syntactic category but a semantic feature for whichis unmarked; is quantificational only if its sister is aquantifier. Otherwise is merely proximative: 'near'. Tests confirmthat quantificational heads a prepositional phrase within the nounphrase. While most prepositional quantifiers have this structure,accusative-assigning is the relativized head of a hybrid phrase due tofeatural deficiencies.

Numeral-noun complements of undergo approximative inversion--the nounmoving to specifier position--to circumvent LONE-WD. Approximativeinversion is likewise subject to a variant of LONE-WD, which requires asingle PROSODIC word in the quantified constituent. When inversion isimpossible a pleonastic count noun is inserted instead.

An Optimality-Theoretic model is proposed, formalizing LONE-WD andconstraints requiring prosodic contiguity and exceptions to LONE-WD causedby words expressing more closely defined measure.