ESTONIAN ACADEMY
PUBLISHERS
eesti teaduste
akadeemia kirjastus
PUBLISHED
SINCE 1965
 
Linguistica Uralica cover
Linguistica Uralica
ISSN 1736-7506 (Electronic)
ISSN 0868-4731 (Print)
Scalarity and Dimensionality across Categories. Estonian Pseudopartitive Constructions; pp. 22-40
PDF | doi:10.3176/lu.2011.1.02

Author
Anne Tamm
Abstract
Estonian abstract nouns diverge in their morphosyntactic properties, and this reveals several new facts about the semantic structure of nouns and the nature of derivation. Although temperatuur ’temperature’ and soe ’warmth, heat’ are synonyms in Estonian, ’warmth’ can appear in pseudopartitive constructions (PPC), while ’temperature’ cannot (viis kraadi sooja/#temperatuuri ’five degrees above zero’). The article shows that the morphosyntactic behavior is sensitive to the lexical semantic meaning, namely, scalarity. If the lexical meaning of the noun encodes a degree along a dimension, then it can appear in a PPC (’warmth’). If the lexical meaning does not encode a degree, then the PPC is not possible (’temperature’). The degree structure of ’warmth’ is a feature derived from adjectives, an option unavailable for the noun ’temperature’.
References

Alho, I. H. 1992, Distinguishing Kind and Set in Finnish. - Studies in the Linguistic Sciences 22, 1-16.

Anttila, A., Fong, V. 2000, The Partitive Constraint in Optimality Theory. - Journal of Semantics 17, 281-314.
doi:10.1093/jos/17.4.281

Chesterman, A. 1991, On Definiteness. A Study with Special Reference to English and Finnish, Cambridge.

de Hoop, H. 1998, Partitivity. - Glot International 3 (2), 3-10.

Erelt, M. 1986, Eesti adjektiivisüntaks, Tallinn (Emakeele Seltsi toimetised 19).

Erelt, M., Kasik, R., Metslang, H., Rajandi, H., Ross, K., Saari, H., Tael, K., Vare, S. 1993, Eesti Keele Grammatika II. Süntaks. Lisa: kiri, Tallinn.

Koptjevskaja-Tamm, M.  2001, ÕA piece of the cakeÕ and Õa cup of teaÕ. Partitive and Pseudo-Partitive Nominal Constructions in the Circum-Baltic Languages. - Circum-Baltic Languages. Volume 2. Grammar and Typology, Amsterdam-Philadelphia (Studies in Language Companion Serie 55), 523-568.

Levin, B. 1993, English Verb Classes and Alternations, Chicago.

Ross, K., Sahkai, H., Tamm, A. 2010, Finiteness and Non-Finiteness in Finno-Ugric Languages. Synchronic, Diachronic and Cross-Modular Issues. - LU XLVI, 229-232.

Schwarzschild, R. 2002, The Grammar of Measurement. - Proceedings of SALT XII, Ithaca, 225-245.

Schwarzschild, R. 2006, The Role of Dimensions in the Syntax of Noun Phrases. - Syntax 9, 67-110.
doi:10.1111/j.1467-9612.2006.00083.x

Stickney, H. 2007. From Pseudopartitive to Partitive. - Proceedings of the 2nd Conference on Generative Approaches to Language Acquisition North America (GALANA), Somerville, MA, 406-415.

Tamm, A. 2004a, Relations between Estonian Verbs, Aspect, and Case, Budapest.

Tamm, A. 2004b, Eesti ja ungari keele verbiaspekti modelleerimise probleeme. - Folia Estonica, Szombathely, 128-147.

Tamm, A. 2007, Perfectivity, Telicity and Estonian Verbs. - Nordic Journal of LinguisticsŹ30, 229-255.
doi:10.1017/S0332586507001746

Tamm, A. 2008, Partitive Morphosemantics across Estonian Grammatical Categories, and Case Variation with Equi and Raising.Ź- Proceedings of the LFG08 Conference, CSLI Publications, Stanford, CA, 473-493.

Tamm, A. 2009, The Estonian Partitive Evidential. Some Notes on the Semantic Parallels between the Aspect and Evidential Categories. - Papers from TAM TAM. Cross-Linguistic Semantics of Tense, Aspect, and Modality, Amsterdam, 365-401.

Viks, Ü., Vare, S., Sahkai, H. 2010, The Database of Estonian Word Families. A Language Technology Resource. - Human Language Technologies. The Baltic Perspective. Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference, Baltic HLT 2010, Amsterdam (Frontiers of Artifical Intelligence and Applications 219), 169-176.
Back to Issue