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Furniture, vegetables, weapons

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This chapter deals with the semantic structure of functional collective superordinates, concentrating on three formally distinguishable classes. These can be termed ‘singular only’ (mass), e.g. furniture, cutlery; ‘plural mostly’, e.g. vegetables, cosmetics; and ‘countable’, e.g. weapons, vehicles. The chapter begins with a semantic overview, then moves to a selective review of the psycholinguistic and other cognitive science literature on superordinates. It is argued that much of this literature is flawed by the ‘All Superordinates are Taxonomic’ Fallacy. The study then presents semantic templates and explications for a sample of words from the three different formal classes just mentioned, in the process differentiating a number of semantic subclasses. A novel proposal is that the semantic structure of functional collective superordinates includes one or more hyponymic exemplars. This proposal and other semantic issues are reprised and discussed before some concluding remarks are offered.
Title: Furniture, vegetables, weapons
Description:
This chapter deals with the semantic structure of functional collective superordinates, concentrating on three formally distinguishable classes.
These can be termed ‘singular only’ (mass), e.
g.
furniture, cutlery; ‘plural mostly’, e.
g.
vegetables, cosmetics; and ‘countable’, e.
g.
weapons, vehicles.
The chapter begins with a semantic overview, then moves to a selective review of the psycholinguistic and other cognitive science literature on superordinates.
It is argued that much of this literature is flawed by the ‘All Superordinates are Taxonomic’ Fallacy.
The study then presents semantic templates and explications for a sample of words from the three different formal classes just mentioned, in the process differentiating a number of semantic subclasses.
A novel proposal is that the semantic structure of functional collective superordinates includes one or more hyponymic exemplars.
This proposal and other semantic issues are reprised and discussed before some concluding remarks are offered.

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