Adjectives relate individuals to states: Evidence from the two readings of English Determiner + Adjective

As an argument in favor of the (minority) view that adjectives involve a neo-Davidsonian state argument, I argue that it grounds an analysis of the English Determiner + Adjective construction ('the old'). On its “individuated” reading ('the old are generally happier'), this seems...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lelia Glass
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2019-02-01
Series:Glossa
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.glossa-journal.org/articles/552
id doaj-1e66a12d64a84f87b7d56dc09568c286
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1e66a12d64a84f87b7d56dc09568c2862021-09-02T14:13:56ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesGlossa2397-18352019-02-014110.5334/gjgl.552329Adjectives relate individuals to states: Evidence from the two readings of English Determiner + AdjectiveLelia Glass0School of Modern Languages, Georgia Institute of Technology, 613 Cherry Street NW, Atlanta, GAAs an argument in favor of the (minority) view that adjectives involve a neo-Davidsonian state argument, I argue that it grounds an analysis of the English Determiner + Adjective construction ('the old'). On its “individuated” reading ('the old are generally happier'), this seems to refer to 'old individuals'; on its “mass” reading ('the old is never ordinary'), to something like 'oldness'. Empirically, this paper uses naturally-occurring data to show that both readings are more productive than sometimes  suggested. Theoretically, the two are parsimoniously derived by existentially closing off one or the other of the two arguments (the individual argument 'x', the state argument 's') made available by the state analysis – 'λxλs'['old'('s') ∧ 'holder'('x','s')] – deriving a predicate of individuals for the individuated reading, and a predicate of states for the mass reading. This account of Determiner + Adjective further reflects the philosophical idea that properties can be construed as predicates of individuals or as the abstract thing that those individuals share; and connects to other ways of nominalizing both verb phrases and adjectives.https://www.glossa-journal.org/articles/552nominalizationsadjectivesstateslexical semantics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lelia Glass
spellingShingle Lelia Glass
Adjectives relate individuals to states: Evidence from the two readings of English Determiner + Adjective
Glossa
nominalizations
adjectives
states
lexical semantics
author_facet Lelia Glass
author_sort Lelia Glass
title Adjectives relate individuals to states: Evidence from the two readings of English Determiner + Adjective
title_short Adjectives relate individuals to states: Evidence from the two readings of English Determiner + Adjective
title_full Adjectives relate individuals to states: Evidence from the two readings of English Determiner + Adjective
title_fullStr Adjectives relate individuals to states: Evidence from the two readings of English Determiner + Adjective
title_full_unstemmed Adjectives relate individuals to states: Evidence from the two readings of English Determiner + Adjective
title_sort adjectives relate individuals to states: evidence from the two readings of english determiner + adjective
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series Glossa
issn 2397-1835
publishDate 2019-02-01
description As an argument in favor of the (minority) view that adjectives involve a neo-Davidsonian state argument, I argue that it grounds an analysis of the English Determiner + Adjective construction ('the old'). On its “individuated” reading ('the old are generally happier'), this seems to refer to 'old individuals'; on its “mass” reading ('the old is never ordinary'), to something like 'oldness'. Empirically, this paper uses naturally-occurring data to show that both readings are more productive than sometimes  suggested. Theoretically, the two are parsimoniously derived by existentially closing off one or the other of the two arguments (the individual argument 'x', the state argument 's') made available by the state analysis – 'λxλs'['old'('s') ∧ 'holder'('x','s')] – deriving a predicate of individuals for the individuated reading, and a predicate of states for the mass reading. This account of Determiner + Adjective further reflects the philosophical idea that properties can be construed as predicates of individuals or as the abstract thing that those individuals share; and connects to other ways of nominalizing both verb phrases and adjectives.
topic nominalizations
adjectives
states
lexical semantics
url https://www.glossa-journal.org/articles/552
work_keys_str_mv AT leliaglass adjectivesrelateindividualstostatesevidencefromthetworeadingsofenglishdetermineradjective
_version_ 1721174536659927040