2009
DOI: 10.1007/s11229-009-9686-6
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Mass nouns, vagueness and semantic variation

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Cited by 257 publications
(214 citation statements)
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References 34 publications
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“…Accordingly, in the more recent literature, there are several proposed alternatives to the divisiveness criterion which avoid this particular consequence but nevertheless preserve the idea that there is something special about the parts of mass noun denotations. For instance, working in a theory of vague predicate denotations, Chierchia (2010) proposes that water has no stable minimal parts, i.e. elements that remain atomic across contexts.…”
Section: Sums and Partsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Accordingly, in the more recent literature, there are several proposed alternatives to the divisiveness criterion which avoid this particular consequence but nevertheless preserve the idea that there is something special about the parts of mass noun denotations. For instance, working in a theory of vague predicate denotations, Chierchia (2010) proposes that water has no stable minimal parts, i.e. elements that remain atomic across contexts.…”
Section: Sums and Partsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If we wanted to replace divisiveness with Chierchia's (2010) notion of unstable atomicity, Landman's (2011) notion of overlap, or Grimm's (2012) notion of strong connectedness, we could recognize analogous replacement notions, pairing cumulativity with whatever thesis we wished to adopt concerning parts. Henceforth, I will whenever possible use the term homogeneous in a general way, intended to allow alternative possible theses about parts to be used in place of the traditional divisiveness.…”
Section: Sums and Partsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Context sensitivity: vagueness and overlap Chierchia's (2010) main claim is that mass nouns are vague in a way that count nouns are not. Mass nouns are uncountable, because they lack stable atoms.…”
Section: 1mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We highlight two key factors that have been proposed to play a role in the mass/count distinction as part of a mereological semantics: (i) vagueness (understood in terms of a kind of context-sensitivity) (Chierchia 2010); (ii) disjointness vs. overlap at a context in a noun's denotation (Rothstein 2010;Landman 2011). …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%