From Adjectives to Quantifiers. Evidence from Old and Modern Catalan

Authors

  • Bruno Camus Bergareche Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha
  • Manuel Pérez-Saldanya Universitat de València

Abstract

The history of indefinite quantifiers in Romance languages is basically the history of the development of new distributional patterns in the case of some Latin adjectives (Company 1991, 1997; Batllori 1998). This new distribution will contribute to the construction of the new subclass of Romance determiners we call Quantifiers. As explained by Zamparelli (2000), the growing structural complexity of the left margin of DetP entails the specialization of old word classes for those new positions. A Quantifier position creates thus the Quantifier word class. This is a longterm process, the effects of which are clearly seen in medieval Romance for words derived from adjectives, such as MULTUS and PAUCUS, but also in later Romance adjectives such as Catalan bastant or even in Contemporary Catalan with the word suficient, which has a similar meaning (Brucart; Rigau 2002, Camus 2005, 2008, 2009).

Keywords

Word Class, Distributional Patterns, Left Margin of DetP, Catalan Diachronic Syntax, Indefinite Quantifiers

Published

2011-12-01

How to Cite

Camus Bergareche, B., & Pérez-Saldanya, M. (2011). From Adjectives to Quantifiers. Evidence from Old and Modern Catalan. Catalan Journal of Linguistics, 10, 221–245. https://doi.org/10.5565/rev/catjl.62

Downloads

Publication Facts

Metric
This article
Other articles
Peer reviewers 
0
2.4

Reviewer profiles  N/A

Author statements

Author statements
This article
Other articles
Data availability 
N/A
16%
External funding 
No
32%
Competing interests 
No
11%
Metric
This journal
Other journals
Articles accepted 
38%
33%
Days to publication 
677
145

Indexed in

Editor & editorial board
profiles
Academic society 
Catalan Journal of Linguistics

PFL

1 2 3 4 5
Not useful Very useful