Article published In: Journal of Pidgin and Creole Languages
Vol. 26:2 (2011) ► pp.363–385
The expression of number in Jamaican Creole
Published online: 3 August 2011
https://doi.org/10.1075/jpcl.26.2.05ste
https://doi.org/10.1075/jpcl.26.2.05ste
In this paper I argue that there is no true number morphology in Jamaican Creole (JC). Instead, I show that dem, traditionally taken to be a plural marker, is more properly analyzed as a marker of inclusiveness, a defining characteristic of definiteness. These are expected outcomes of JC being in the class of languages which are claimed to have set nouns, i.e. nouns which, when combined with a numeral X, refer to an X-numbered set of individuals rather than to X number of individuals (Rijkhoff 2004). Since JC does not mark plurality in the same way as its lexifier English, individuation and number in JC cannot be analysed in the same way as is done for English. The proposal for a syntactic analysis of number in JC, given the above, is that functional structure above the NP provides for optional individuation via Cl(assifier)Phrase, and additionally for optional number specification, via Num(ber)Phrase.
Keywords: inclusiveness, individuation, set nouns, number marking
Cited by (5)
Cited by five other publications
López, Luis, Rodi Laanen, Charlotte Pouw & M. Carmen Parafita Couto
Patrick, Peter L.
2017. Number marking in Jamaican Patwa. In Language Contact in Africa and the African Diaspora in the Americas [Creole Language Library, 53], ► pp. 275 ff.
Ziegeler, Debra
2017. Quantification under negative scope in Singapore English. In Negation and Contact [Studies in Language Companion Series, 183], ► pp. 171 ff.
Durrlemann, Stéphanie
2015. Nominal architecture in Jamaican Creole. Journal of Pidgin and Creole Languages 30:2 ► pp. 265 ff.
Aboh, Enoch Oladé & Michel DeGraff
2014. Some notes on bare noun phrases in Haitian Creole and Gùngbè. In The Sociolinguistics of Grammar [Studies in Language Companion Series, 154], ► pp. 203 ff.
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