Award Name

Junior Award Winner

Researcher ORCID Identifier

0009-0007-0000-4393

Author Information

Xuehuai He, Pomona College

Award Date

Spring 2024

Description/Abstract

"There are twenty or thirty people." What exactly does this mean? Is it exactly twenty or thirty, or is it an approximate range? What about "twenty or twenty-six people"? Approximating number pairs (ANPs) are a kind of approximative expression that takes a number pair and expresses a quantity close to it. There are constraints on the structure and choice of numerals: many combinations would be ungrammatical or denote a precise disjunction rather than being approximative. Studies like Eriksson et al. (2010) statistically generalized the grammar of ANPs through corpus studies on select European languages. However, these surface-level generalizations fail to apply straightforwardly to an analytical, classifier language like Mandarin. This paper offers a description of Mandarin ANPs, proposing a new set of rules for the well-formedness of ANPs based on grammatical rather than mathematical properties. The new proposals also align with theories of other approximatives in Mandarin, shedding light on the cognition of approximation.

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