In:The Form of Structure, the Structure of Form: Essays in honor of Jean Lowenstamm
Edited by Sabrina Bendjaballah, Noam Faust, Mohamed Lahrouchi and Nicola Lampitelli
[Language Faculty and Beyond 12] 2014
► pp. 303–314
On Plurals, noun phrase and num(ber) in Moroccan Arabic and Djibouti Somali
Published online: 17 December 2014
https://doi.org/10.1075/lfab.12.23lah
https://doi.org/10.1075/lfab.12.23lah
In this paper, we focus on plural nouns in two Afroasiatic languages: Moroccan Arabic and Djibouti Somali. Within a syntactic approach to word formation, we show that not all plurals are located in the same syntactic position. In Moroccan Arabic, one plural results from the merger of a root with the head n, whereas the other realizes a feature on the number head. In a similar way, Somali displays two suffixal plurals, which realize two distinct syntactic structures. One suffix is associated to numP and behaves as a regular plural suffix; in contrast, the other suffix is analyzed as a bound root that selects for xPs (nP or numP) containing the feminine gender.
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Cited by (4)
Cited by four other publications
Jaradat, Abdulazeez
Dali, Myriam & Eric Mathieu
Lahrouchi, Mohamed & Rachid Ridouane
[no author supplied]
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