COUNT NOUN
In linguistics, a 'count noun' (also 'countable noun') is a noun which can be modified by a numeral and occur in both singular and plural form, as well as co-occurring with quantificational determiners like ''every'', ''each'', ''several'', ''most'', etc. A mass noun has none of these properties. It can't be modified by a numeral, occur in singular/plural or co-occur with the relevant kind of determiner. Below we see examples of all these properties for the count noun ''chair'' and the mass noun ''furniture''. As always in discussion of syntax, a star "
★ " in front of a sentence indicates that the sentence is ill-formed.
★ Modification by numeral:
: We saw seven 'chairs' in the room.
:
★ We saw seven 'furniture[s]' in the room.
★ Occurrence in plural/singular.
: There is 'a chair' in the room.
: There are 'chairs' in the room.
:
★ There is a 'furniture' in the room.
:
★ There are 'furnitures' in the room.
★ Co-occurrence with count determiners
: 'Every chair' is man made.
: There are 'several chairs' in the room.
:
★ 'Every furniture' is man made.
:
★ There are 'several furnitures' in the room.
Some determiners can be used with both mass and count nouns, including "some", "a lot (of)", "no".
A common misunderstanding concerning the mass/count distinction is that it is based on the type of thing the different nouns refer to. Mass nouns are thought to refer to things (or substances) that can't be counted, while count nouns are supposed to refer to ones that can. That this can't be right is seen with our examples above, using ''chair'' (count) and ''furniture'' (mass). If we have seven chairs in a room, they can be described both as "chairs" and as "furniture". The mass/count distinction must therefore pertain to the expressions themselves ("chair" vs. "furniture") and not to the things they refer to. One may say that the noun "furniture" does not explicitly specify that it refers to individuals, while the noun "chair" does. Some substances (or abstract phenomena like fun and hope) have properties which make it difficult to refer to them with a count noun. For example, it is difficult to think about air as individuated chunks (unless we are discussing air at a molecular level). Consequently, we tend to refer to air with the mass noun "air". To be used as a count noun, it must be possible to think of the stuff being named as discrete individuals. In contrast, mass nouns can refer to just about anything, including individuals. Further, if we specify the unit of measurement, we can refer to even such substances as count, as in "two litres of wine". But the mass/count distinction remains a grammatical classification of ''expressions'' and not the sort of thing they refer to.
Following the work of logicians like Godehard Link and Manfred Krifka, we know that the mass/count distinction can be given a precise mathematical definition in terms of notions like cumulativity and quantization.
Some languages treat all nouns as basically mass, and need to make use of a noun classifier to add numerals and other quantifiers. To take an example from Mandarin Chinese, which marks count(ed) nouns with a noun classifier:
:那人吃完了 (nà rén chī wán le)
can equally well mean "That person has eaten" or "Those people have eaten" - you're not counting them, so you don't need a classifier, and Mandarin doesn't distinguish singular vs. plural
:那位人吃完了 (nà wèi rén chī wán le) means "That (one) person has eaten"
:那三位人吃完了(nà sān wèi rén chī wán le) means "Those three people have eaten"
A classifier, therefore, implies that the object(s) referred to are countable in the sense that the speaker intends them to be enumerated, rather than considered as a unit (regardless of quantity).
On the other hand, words such as "milk" or "rice" are not count nouns, but they can be counted with an appropriate unit of measure (e.g. "''glasses'' of milk" or "''spoonfuls'' of rice"). This leads to another example from Mandarin to illustrate some further points about count nouns:
★ 她有'七本书'在桌子上 (tā yŏu 'qī bĕn shū' zài zhuōzi shàng) - "She has 'seven books' on the table."
★ 他写完'七本书' (tā xiĕ wán 'qī bĕn shū') - "She has written 'seven books'"
In both cases, the word "book" is a count noun, and in Mandarin take the classifier 本 (bĕn).
This use of a classifier is similar to, but not identical with, the use of units of measure to count ''groups'' of objects in English. For example, in "three shelves of books", "shelves" is used as a unit of measurement, and ''books'' is indeed a mass noun, since the speaker is not counting individual books - she is counting ''shelves'' of books. By contrast, in the sentence "At 10 books per shelf, you have 30 books," both instances of "books" are an example of a count noun, and require a "measure word" in Chinese (or, as linguists sometimes call it, a "noun classifier", of which measure words are one type).
Different languages may treat "measured nouns" differently from "count nouns"; some, like Mandarin, will require a classifier before the unit of measure, while others may not require them at all.
:三杯杯子面 (sān bēi bēizi miàn) - "Three [classifier] cups (of) noodles"
:三块面 (sān kuài miàn) "Three [classifier] noodles".
Notice that the classifier changes as the unit being counted changes.
★ mass noun
★ collective noun
★ grammatical number
★ " in front of a sentence indicates that the sentence is ill-formed.
★ Modification by numeral:
: We saw seven 'chairs' in the room.
:
★ We saw seven 'furniture[s]' in the room.
★ Occurrence in plural/singular.
: There is 'a chair' in the room.
: There are 'chairs' in the room.
:
★ There is a 'furniture' in the room.
:
★ There are 'furnitures' in the room.
★ Co-occurrence with count determiners
: 'Every chair' is man made.
: There are 'several chairs' in the room.
:
★ 'Every furniture' is man made.
:
★ There are 'several furnitures' in the room.
Some determiners can be used with both mass and count nouns, including "some", "a lot (of)", "no".
A common misunderstanding concerning the mass/count distinction is that it is based on the type of thing the different nouns refer to. Mass nouns are thought to refer to things (or substances) that can't be counted, while count nouns are supposed to refer to ones that can. That this can't be right is seen with our examples above, using ''chair'' (count) and ''furniture'' (mass). If we have seven chairs in a room, they can be described both as "chairs" and as "furniture". The mass/count distinction must therefore pertain to the expressions themselves ("chair" vs. "furniture") and not to the things they refer to. One may say that the noun "furniture" does not explicitly specify that it refers to individuals, while the noun "chair" does. Some substances (or abstract phenomena like fun and hope) have properties which make it difficult to refer to them with a count noun. For example, it is difficult to think about air as individuated chunks (unless we are discussing air at a molecular level). Consequently, we tend to refer to air with the mass noun "air". To be used as a count noun, it must be possible to think of the stuff being named as discrete individuals. In contrast, mass nouns can refer to just about anything, including individuals. Further, if we specify the unit of measurement, we can refer to even such substances as count, as in "two litres of wine". But the mass/count distinction remains a grammatical classification of ''expressions'' and not the sort of thing they refer to.
Following the work of logicians like Godehard Link and Manfred Krifka, we know that the mass/count distinction can be given a precise mathematical definition in terms of notions like cumulativity and quantization.
Some languages treat all nouns as basically mass, and need to make use of a noun classifier to add numerals and other quantifiers. To take an example from Mandarin Chinese, which marks count(ed) nouns with a noun classifier:
:那人吃完了 (nà rén chī wán le)
can equally well mean "That person has eaten" or "Those people have eaten" - you're not counting them, so you don't need a classifier, and Mandarin doesn't distinguish singular vs. plural
:那位人吃完了 (nà wèi rén chī wán le) means "That (one) person has eaten"
:那三位人吃完了(nà sān wèi rén chī wán le) means "Those three people have eaten"
A classifier, therefore, implies that the object(s) referred to are countable in the sense that the speaker intends them to be enumerated, rather than considered as a unit (regardless of quantity).
On the other hand, words such as "milk" or "rice" are not count nouns, but they can be counted with an appropriate unit of measure (e.g. "''glasses'' of milk" or "''spoonfuls'' of rice"). This leads to another example from Mandarin to illustrate some further points about count nouns:
★ 她有'七本书'在桌子上 (tā yŏu 'qī bĕn shū' zài zhuōzi shàng) - "She has 'seven books' on the table."
★ 他写完'七本书' (tā xiĕ wán 'qī bĕn shū') - "She has written 'seven books'"
In both cases, the word "book" is a count noun, and in Mandarin take the classifier 本 (bĕn).
This use of a classifier is similar to, but not identical with, the use of units of measure to count ''groups'' of objects in English. For example, in "three shelves of books", "shelves" is used as a unit of measurement, and ''books'' is indeed a mass noun, since the speaker is not counting individual books - she is counting ''shelves'' of books. By contrast, in the sentence "At 10 books per shelf, you have 30 books," both instances of "books" are an example of a count noun, and require a "measure word" in Chinese (or, as linguists sometimes call it, a "noun classifier", of which measure words are one type).
Different languages may treat "measured nouns" differently from "count nouns"; some, like Mandarin, will require a classifier before the unit of measure, while others may not require them at all.
:三杯杯子面 (sān bēi bēizi miàn) - "Three [classifier] cups (of) noodles"
:三块面 (sān kuài miàn) "Three [classifier] noodles".
Notice that the classifier changes as the unit being counted changes.
| Contents |
| See also |
See also
★ mass noun
★ collective noun
★ grammatical number
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