cantidad plural

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 - 1 - 1 EXPRESIÓN DE LA CANTIDAD 1. INTRODUCTION 2. PLURAL IN ADJECTIVES 3. PLURAL IN PRONOUNS 4. PLURAL IN VERBS 5. PLURAL IN NOUN Regular plural Irregular plural Foreign Plurals 6. USE OF SINGULAR AND PLURAL IN NOUNS "Singular ia Tantum" /"Pluralia Tantum Zero Plural Differentiated Plura ls 7. COUNTABLE AND UNCOUNTABLE Definition Semantic aspect Partitive Constructions 1. INTRODUCTION In English only two numbers are distinguished, singular, which denotes "one" and plural, which denotes "more than one". The survivals of a dual number are few. The two numbers are distinguished in: nouns, pronouns and verbs but not as a rule in adjectives and never in adverbs. 2. PLURAL IN ADJECTIVES The only quantitative words in which distinction between the two numbers exist or has existed in modern English period are: little (bread) few (loaves) less (courage) fewer (pins) much (money) many (books) The adjective  several is generally used to qualify a plural word.  Both, of course, is plural but all and whole may be used with singular and plural nouns, eg. all the money, all the men; one whole year, the whole lambs. And such numerical adjectives as four, forty, ... are always plural. 3. PLURAL IN PRONOUNS The irregularity of pronominal inflection makes it necessary to enumerate here all the forms. SINGULAR PLURAL I, me myself you (thou, thee) yourself he, him himself she, her herself we, us ourselves you (ye) yourselves they, them themselves these

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EXPRESIÓN DE LA CANTIDAD

1.  INTRODUCTION

2.  PLURAL IN ADJECTIVES

3.  PLURAL IN PRONOUNS

4.  PLURAL IN VERBS5.  PLURAL IN NOUN

Regular plural

Irregular pluralForeign Plurals

6.  USE OF SINGULAR AND PLURAL IN NOUNS

"Singularia Tantum" /"Pluralia Tantum

Zero PluralDifferentiated Plurals

7.  COUNTABLE AND UNCOUNTABLE

Definition

Semantic aspectPartitive Constructions

1.  INTRODUCTION

In English only two numbers are distinguished, singular, which denotes "one" and plural, which

denotes "more than one". The survivals of a dual number are few.

The two numbers are distinguished in: nouns, pronouns and verbs but not as a rule in adjectives and

never in adverbs.

2.  PLURAL IN ADJECTIVES

The only quantitative words in which distinction between the two numbers exist or has existed in

modern English period are:

little (bread) few (loaves)less (courage) fewer (pins)

much (money) many (books)

The adjective  several is generally used to qualify a plural word.  Both, of course, is plural but all and

whole may be used with singular and plural nouns, eg. all the money, all the men; one whole year, the

whole lambs. And such numerical adjectives as four, forty, ... are always plural.

3.  PLURAL IN PRONOUNS

The irregularity of pronominal inflection makes it necessary to enumerate here all the forms.

SINGULAR PLURAL

I, me myself 

you (thou, thee) yourself he, him himself 

she, her herself 

we, us ourselves

you (ye) yourselvesthey, them themselves

these

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it itself thisthat

one

thoseones

4.  PLURALS IN VERBS

 No distinction is made between the two numbers except in the present tense, and there it is found in the

3rd person singular only, which ends genarally in "-s". In the past simple we have the solitary example

"was", plural "were", in all other verbs the plural is like the singular.

5.  PLURAL IN NOUNS

5.1 REGULAR PLURAL is formed by means of an "-s" suffix.

Spelling: The plural suffix is written "-s" after most nouns including nouns ending in silent "e". There

are, however, several classes of exceptions:

? The ending is spelled "-es" after nouns ending in sibilants, unless the noun is written with a silent"e". -s ?? gas, gases -ch ?  porch, porches

-z ? buzz, buzzes -sh ? bush, bushes 

-x ? box, boxes -ze ?  size, sizes

? "-y" + "s" becomes "-ys": after vowels (days) and in proper nouns (the Kennedys).

? "-y" + "s" becomes "- ies" after consonant, eg. spy, spies; fly, flies.

? Doubling of consonants in a few words: quiz, quizzes.

? Apostrophe ('s) in letters (dot your i's) and numerals (in the 1970's / 1970s).

? The regular plural suffix of nouns in "-o" has two spellings: "-os" and "-oes". In the following

cases the spelling is "-os":

-  after a vowel: Kangaroos, radios, studios,...

-  in proper names: Romeos, Eskimos, ...-  in abbreviations: kilos, photos, pros, pianos, ...

5.2 IRREGULAR PLURALS. The particular plurals of some nouns have to be learned as individual

lexical items, we can find:

?  Mutation, which involves a change of the media vowel, for example:  foot - feet; tooth - teeth,woman - women; man - men; mouse - mice.

?  "-en" plural, this occurs in nouns such as: child - children; ox - oxen.

5.3 FOREIGN PLURALS Many foreign words, especially Latin and Greek, keep their origianl

naminative plurals, though in the more familiar words there is a strong tendency to form a regular 

English plural.

?  Singular "-a", plural "-ae": alga,-ae, formula, -ae, penumbra, -ae 

?  Singular "-us", plural "-i" /ai/: cactus, -i /-uses; stimulus, -i

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?  Singular "-us", plural "-us": apparatus -us /-uses

?  Singular "-um/-on" (Greek), plural "-a": aquarium, -a /-ums; criterion, -a. But there are some

words that have the singular with "-um", that only take "-s" plural: decorum,-s; millenium, -s;

museum, -s

?  Singular "-is", plural "-es": basis, bases; analysis, analyses; crisis, crises 

?  French plurals: bureau, bureaux; madam, mesdames; adieu, adieux 

?  Hebrew plurals in "- im": cherub, cherubim (cherubs); seraph, seraphim (seraphs) 

6.  USE OF SINGULAR AND PLURAL IN NOUNS

"SINGULARIA TANTUM" /"PLURALIA TANTUM”

Some nouns have only one number form. Thus, many concrete mass nouns ( gold, silver, uranium ...)

and abstract mass nouns (courage, music, dirt , ...) never take a plural suffix. The same applies to proper 

nouns, which take a singular verb and are typically invariable, and to many collective nouns, such as,

 police, cattle, clergy. All these nouns are called "Singularia Tantum", because they never take the plural

form.

We can also find words which were originally plurals and now are used in singular, although they still

have the final "-s". For example: news; some diseases: mumps, measles; some subjects and sciences:

 physics, politics; some games: billiards, bowls, dominoes; some proper names: Athens, Brussels, Wales.

On the contrary, some others never appear in the singular form, for example: instruments or tools and

articles of dress consisting of two equal parts which are joined, such as,  scissors, glasses, trousers, tights,... The noun of which they are head can be made singular and countable by means of " a pair of".

ZERO PLURAL

They are words that don't change their form when they are used in singular or plural. For example:

These sheep looks small or  All those sheep are mine.

We can find zero plurals with names of nationalities in "-ese": Japanese, Chinese, Portuguese, ...

 Nouns denoting measure or quantity normally have zero plural when they are premodifiers in noun

 phrases: a six-mile walk, a two-hour exam, a five-second pause, a ten-pound note, ...

THE DIFFERENTIATED PLURAL

In many cases the plural has a meaning which is more or less different from that of the same word in

the singular. For example:

advice: counsel effect: resultadvices: information effects: goods, personal property

force: strength custom: habitsforces: army customs: duties, taxes on imported goods

manner: modemanners: behaviour 

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Let's move now to the following point

7.  COUNTABLE AND UNCOUNTABLE

7.1 DEFINITIONS

Some grammarians have defined countable nouns as nouns denoting countable phenomena, ie. nouns

denoting things that can be counted. Such concepts refer to:

-  material things: chair, table, window, ...-  immaterial things of various orders: week, knock, talk .,...

On the other hand, uncountable nouns are nouns denoting non-countable phenomena, ie. nouns

denoting concepts that cannot be counted. They may be:

-  material, in which case they denote some stuff or substance in itself independent of 

form: wine, gold, air , ...

-  immaterial, such as: anxiety, confusion, boredom, music, and most words ending in -

tion, -ment and -ness.

Other grammarians use other terms to define such concepts: Jespersen calls them thing-words  

(countable) and mass-words (uncountable) and Zandvoort class-nouns and material-nouns respectively.

7.2 DISTINCTION FROM A SEMANTIC CRITERION

The distinction between countable and uncountable is easy if we look at the idea that is expressed in

each single instance. But in practical language the distinction is not carried through in such a way that one

and the same word stands always for one and the same idea.

The language makes it posssible to look upon some objects from the point of view of both count and

noncount, as in the case of 'cake':

Would you like a cake? (Countable) No, I don't like cake (Uncountable)

Such nouns are said to have dual class membership.

In other cases, for example 'paper', there is no readily perceptible parallelism, but a notable difference

in meaning between the two nouns:

I want an evening paper (newspaper)Wrap the parcel up in brown  paper (wrapping paper)

Moreover, we can find a separate count noun and a separate non-count referring to the same area of 

meaning:

COUNTABLE UNCOUNTABLE COUNTABLE UNCOUNTABLE

a loaf a meal

a poem

 breadfood

 poetry

a laugha weapon

a suitcase

laughter arms

luggage