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Singulative number
Singulative number
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In linguistics, singulative number and collective number (abbreviated SGV and COL) are terms used when the grammatical number for multiple items is the unmarked form of a noun, and the noun is specially marked to indicate a single item.

This is the opposite of the more common singularplural pattern, where a noun is unmarked when it represents one item, and is marked to represent more than one item.

In some cases, a further distinction is made between the collective and what is known in some terminologies as the plurative, the former referencing multiple items as a class, the latter referencing them as individual units.

Greenberg's linguistic universal #35 states that no language is purely singulative-collective in the sense that plural is always the null morpheme and singular is not.[1]

Examples

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Welsh

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Welsh has two systems of grammatical number, singular–plural and collective–singulative. Since the loss of the noun inflection system of earlier Celtic, plurals have become unpredictable and can be formed in several ways: by adding a suffix to the end of the word (most commonly -au), as in tad "father" and tadau "fathers", through vowel affection, as in bachgen "boy" and bechgyn "boys", or through a combination of the two, as in chwaer "sister" and chwiorydd "sisters". Other nouns take the singulative suffixes -yn (for masculine nouns) or -en (for feminine nouns). Most nouns which inflect according to this system designate objects that are frequently found in groups, for example adar "birds/flock of birds", aderyn "bird"; mefus "a bed of strawberries", mefusen "a strawberry"; plant "children", plentyn "a child"; and coed "forest", coeden "a tree". Still other nouns use suffixes for both singular and plural forms (e.g. merlen "a pony", merlod "ponies", the unsuffixed *merl does not exist); these are similar to nouns formed from other categories of words (e.g. cardod "charity" gives rise to cardotyn "a beggar" and cardotwyr "beggars").

When translating the Welsh collective noun into English the plural is usually used, e.g. mefus → 'strawberries'. However, the Welsh collective also has a sense of a homogenous whole which the English plural cannot convey; compare the English 'foliage' vs. 'leaves'.

Other languages

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Singulatives are featured in some Semitic and Slavic languages.[2]

In Arabic grammar, the singulative is called اسم الوحدة, "noun of unity". It is formed by the suffixes:

  1. ة -a(t), applies to animals, plants, and inanimate objects[3]
  2. ي -ī, applies to sentient beings
suffix ة -a(t)
collective singulative
قمح     qamḥ
"wheat"
قمحة     qamḥa(t)
"a grain of wheat"
شجر     shajar
"trees"
شجرة     shajara(t)
"a tree"
بقر     baqar
"cattle"
بقرة     baqara(t)
"a cow"
suffix ي -ī
collective singulative
جن     jinn جني     jinnī
زنج     zinj
"black African people"
زنجى     zinjī
"a black African person"

In some cases, the singulative has a further plural indicating a collection of the singular units, which may be broken or regular.

broken جند     jund
'army'
جندي     jundī
'a soldier'
جنود     junūd
'soldiers'
regular عسكر     `askar
'army, military'
عسكري     `askarī
'a soldier, private, or enlisted man'
عسكريون     `askarīyūn
'soldiers, privates, enlisted men'

In East Slavic languages, which are basically of singular–plural system, the singular suffix -ин- ('-in-', Russian, '-yn-', Ukrainian), resp. '-ін-' ('-in-', Belarusian) performs the singulative function for collective nouns.[2]

collective singulative
Russian горох,     gorokh
"peas in mass"
горошина,     goroshina
"a single pea"
Ukrainian пісок,     pisok
"sand"
піщина,     pischyna
"grain of sand"[2]
Belarusian бульба,     buĺba
"potatoes in mass", e.g. as a crop or as a species
бульбіна,     buĺbina
"one potato tuber"

Notice the affix '-a' in all these examples, which indicates the feminine form. Notice also that plural forms may be derived from these singulatives in a regular way: goroshina->goroshiny (several peas), etc.

In both East Slavic and Arabic, the singulative form always takes on the feminine gender.[clarification needed] [citation needed]

Singulative markers are found throughout the Nilo-Saharan languages. Majang, for example, has:

ŋɛɛti

lice.COL

 

ŋɛɛti-n

louse.SGV

(Bender 1983:124)

 

ŋɛɛti → ŋɛɛti-n

lice.COL {} louse.SGV

In Dutch, singulative forms of collective nouns are occasionally made by diminutives:

snoep

"sweets, candy"

 

snoepje

"sweet, piece of candy"

snoep → snoepje

{"sweets, candy"} {} {"sweet, piece of candy"}

These singulatives can be pluralized like most other nouns: snoepjes "several sweets, pieces of candy".[citation needed]

Comparison with mass nouns

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A collective form such as the Welsh moch, "pigs", is more basic than the singular form mochyn, "a pig". It is generally the collective form which is used as an adjectival modifier, e.g. cig moch ("pig meat", "pork"). The collective form is therefore similar in many respects to an English mass noun such as "rice", which in fact refers to a collection of items which are logically countable. However, English has no productive process of forming singulative nouns (just phrases such as "a grain of rice"). Therefore, English cannot be said to have singulative number.

Plurative

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In some cases, in addition to the collective and singulative forms, a third form, called the "plurative" in the terminology of some scholars, is distinguished from the collective. The collective form, in these cases, denotes multiple items as a class while the plurative denotes them as individuals. Compare, for example, "people" in "People are funny" with "people" in "the people in this room", though in English the same plural form is used for both purposes.

Example: In Arabic, for samak, "fish":[4]

  • samak, collective form, fish in general
  • samak-a(t), samak-e, singulative, a single fish
  • ʔasmaak, plurative, as in "many fish" or "three fish"

See also

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References

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Bibliography

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
In , the singulative number is a that denotes a single unit or instance by adding a morphological marker to an unmarked base form, which typically represents a , , , or transnumeral . Unlike the more common singular-plural distinction, where the singular is often unmarked and the plural is derived, the singulative inverts this pattern by marking the individual against a default or non-singular form, often applying to entities perceived as naturally grouped, such as , grains, or foliage. This category highlights degrees of in language, reflecting how speakers conceptualize entities on a scale from undifferentiated masses to fully independent individuals. Singulative constructions appear in diverse language families, including Celtic (e.g., Welsh dail "leaves" → dail-yn "a leaf"), Semitic (e.g., Maltese nemel "ants" → nemla "ant"), Cushitic (e.g., Baiso inflectional singulatives), and Nilotic (e.g., Luwo), as well as in derivational forms in languages like Russian for mass nouns (e.g., gорох "peas" → goroshina "a pea"). These systems often overlap with diminutives or individualizers, and their use is sensitive to animacy hierarchies, being more frequent for lower-animacy nouns like plants or small animals, which are less inherently individuated than humans. Research indicates that singulatives are more widespread than previously assumed, challenging views of their rarity and prompting studies into their morphological typology, semantic interactions, and diachronic development across languages. Theoretically, singulatives contribute to understanding as a multifaceted category that encodes not just quantity but also part-whole structures and perceptual boundaries of entities. They fit within broader typological frameworks, such as scales of , where collective-singulative oppositions occupy an intermediate position between mass-like substances and discrete countables. Ongoing investigations explore factors like cognitive processing and social contexts influencing their evolution, underscoring their role in cross-linguistic variation in nominal morphology.

Definition and Overview

Grammatical Number Context

is a morphological and in that encodes distinctions in the quantity or individuality of referents, primarily through inflections on , pronouns, adjectives, and verbs. It allows speakers to indicate whether a refers to a single entity, multiple entities, or other quantified forms, influencing agreement across syntactic elements. This category is universal in human but manifests in diverse ways, reflecting how conceptualize countability and aggregation. The most widespread number systems distinguish between singular, which marks one individual or unit, and plural, which denotes more than one. Less common but attested in various language families are dual, specifying exactly two referents, and trial, for exactly three; these often appear in pronominal systems or with highly animate nouns. For example, in many Indo-European languages such as English, nouns inflect straightforwardly for singular and plural, as in cat (one animal) versus cats (more than one). Such binary systems contrast with more elaborate ones in other families, where additional categories like paucal (a small number) or greater plural (a large multitude) may further subdivide plurality. Number systems exhibit significant variation across language families, shaped by historical and typological factors. In , the singular-plural opposition is typically the default, with dual and forms preserved in ancient stages but largely lost in modern descendants except in isolated cases. By contrast, some families, such as Celtic and certain , feature systems where the unmarked form defaults to a or sense, prompting the development of singulative markers to denote singularity from that base. This divergence highlights how evolves to align with cultural and cognitive priorities in quantifying referents, with no single system prevailing universally.

Characteristics of Singulative

The is a that expresses a single instance or unit through an overt morphological marker, typically applied to nouns whose unmarked form denotes a , mass, or sense. This marking inverts the more common singular- opposition found in many languages, where the singular is unmarked and the is derived, by instead deriving the singular from an unmarked base that defaults to plurality or collectivity. As such, the singulative serves as a mechanism for within broader systems. Morphologically, the singulative is characteristically realized through affixes, most often suffixes, that attach to the or base to isolate a single . This overt coding contrasts with the zero-marking of the base form, creating an asymmetry where the singulative form is explicitly derived to signal singularity. Such markers function to "individualize" the , transforming a group-denoting stem into one that refers to a discrete unit, often without altering the stem's inherent semantics beyond this numerical specification. Semantically, the singulative distinguishes one countable portion or instance from the default or interpretation, enabling to units that would otherwise be uncountable or inherently grouped. It thus facilitates the expression of individuality within aggregates, such as a single element extracted from a or non-discrete whole, and in some cases, the singulative form itself can undergo further pluralization to denote multiple such units. Typologically, singulatives are prevalent in languages lacking a default singular category, including certain Celtic and , where they form part of extended number systems that include collectives, plurals, or general number forms. These systems often exhibit three or more distinctions in number marking, with the singulative providing a targeted tool for unitization in contexts where plurality is the unmarked norm. In formal linguistic , the singulative occupies a position on the "scale of " in marking, ranging from minimal in masses or substances to maximal in discrete individuals, thereby inverting typical hierarchies by marking higher levels more explicitly. This placement underscores its role in categorizing entities based on their part-whole structure and inherent numerosity.

Examples in Languages

Celtic Languages

In Celtic languages, particularly the Insular Celtic branch, the singulative number is a prominent morphological category used to derive singular forms from unmarked or plural-like bases, often denoting an unit extracted from a group or mass. This system is especially productive in the Brythonic languages Welsh and Breton, where diminutive suffixes such as -yn/-en in Welsh and -enn in Breton mark the singulative. These forms allow speakers to count or refer to discrete instances that are conceptually grouped in the , reflecting a scale of where collectives represent habitually co-occurring entities like foliage or grains. In Welsh, the collective form typically serves as the base, with the singulative derived via suffixation to indicate a single member. For instance, adar (collective for "birds") contrasts with aderyn (singulative "a bird"), and cacwn (collective "hornets") with cacyn-en (singulative "a hornet"). Similar patterns apply to vegetation and granular substances, such as dail (collective "foliage") yielding dail-en ("a leaf"), or tywod (collective "sand") producing tywod-yn ("a grain of sand"). This productivity extends to borrowed terms and items like berries or grains, enabling the formation of singulatives for countable units from mass-like collectives, such as in references to individual flowers (blodyn from the collective plural blodau). The system facilitates numeral agreement and anaphoric reference to individuals, with singulatives often further pluralizable to denote small sets, as in blodynnau ("some flowers"). Breton exhibits a parallel structure, employing the suffix -enn to form singulatives from collectives, emphasizing individuality within groups. Examples include gwenan (collective "bees") versus gwenanenn ("a bee"), gwez (collective "trees") versus gwezenn ("a tree"), and stered (collective "stars") versus steredenn ("a star"). These singulatives function as countable singulars that can be pluralized with -où, as in gwezennoù ("some trees"), often implying limited or discrete quantities rather than large assemblages. Usage patterns in Breton highlight the singulative's role in specifying units from natural collectives like insects or celestial bodies, with syntactic behaviors aligning plural agreement to the collective base while allowing anaphora to individuals via the derived form. Historically, the singulative system in Insular Celtic languages traces back to Proto-Celtic collective forms, possibly influenced by Proto-Indo-European -nt stems, and became particularly elaborated in Brythonic branches after the loss of neuter gender. In Old Irish (a Goidelic language), remnants appear in derivations like folt ("hair," collective) to foiltne ("a strand of hair") or grán ("corn," collective) to gráinne ("a grain"), using diminutive suffixes such as -án or -én, though less productively than in modern Welsh or Breton. This development underscores the category's stability in Celtic morphology, adapting diminutives to number marking for entities perceived as inherently grouped.

Semitic and Other Language Families

In , the singulative number serves as a key morphological device to derive singular forms from collective nouns, which often function as the unmarked or default category for groups or masses. exemplifies this system prominently, where collectives are typically realized through broken plurals—involving pattern-based internal modifications like vowel shifts or consonant rearrangements—contrasting with sound plurals that employ regular suffixes such as -ūn (masculine) or -āt (feminine). The singulative is formed by appending suffixes like -ah (for nominative/accusative) or -at (for genitive), yielding a unit from the collective base; for instance, the collective naḥl ('bees') becomes naḥlah ('a bee'), and ḥajar ('stones') becomes ḥajarah ('a stone'). This derivation is productive, especially for nouns denoting animals, plants, or natural kinds, and singulatives consistently trigger feminine singular agreement, even if the base is masculine. Within the broader Afro-Asiatic family, exhibit a parallel but distinct singulative strategy, using the feminine circumfix t-...-t to individualize mass or nouns into units of unity. This marker encloses the base, often with or , and applies to inanimates, body parts, or substances; examples include a-fus ('hands', ) deriving ta-fus-t ('a hand') and aman ('water', mass) yielding t-aman-t ('a drop of ' or 'a '). Unlike Arabic's suffixation, Berber's circumfix aligns with the family's prefixal tendencies for nominal derivation, and it reinforces feminine , making singulatives a core tool for in systems where collectives predominate. Singulatives extend to other families, including some Australian Aboriginal languages, where they contrast group terms with individualizers, often via suffixes or reduplication on collective bases for fauna or aggregates. In Nilo-Saharan languages, similar patterns prevail with dedicated suffixes like -n for lice (ŋɛɛti 'lice' collective → ŋɛɛti-n 'louse' singulative), emphasizing units from plurals or masses. These systems highlight global variation, with singulatives deriving from plural-like bases in isolates akin to Slavic duals but repurposed for individuation. Productivity varies: singulatives are largely obligatory for individuating collectives, whereas Berber and Australian forms are more optional or lexicalized, applying to specific semantic classes like natural kinds. Typologically, singulatives occur in about 120 documented languages, a minority (roughly 1-2% of the world's ~7,000 languages), concentrated in non-Indo-European families like Afro-Asiatic (over 40% of cases) and Nilo-Saharan, where default singulars are absent and collectives serve as the base form. Suffixation dominates (91% of markers), underscoring singulatives' role in languages prioritizing group reference.

Comparisons and Contrasts

With Mass Nouns

Mass nouns denote uncountable substances or aggregates, such as "" or "" in English, which lack inherent and cannot be directly quantified with numerals without additional modifiers like measure phrases (e.g., "a of " or "a handful of "). This uncountability arises because mass nouns refer to homogeneous portions without discrete boundaries, treating the entire mass as a singular by default, though portions can be referenced periphrastically. In contrast, singulatives offer a morphological mechanism to individuate and units from such mass-like or bases, directly deriving a countable singular form via . For example, in Welsh, "dodrefn" (furniture, mass-like) becomes "dodrefnyn" (a piece of furniture) with the -yn. This differs from the periphrastic strategies in languages, where no dedicated creates countable units from the mass itself. A key distinction lies in the grammatical : singulatives reverse the typical number marking by leaving the collective or form unmarked and explicitly marking the singular unit, whereas nouns maintain an unmarked singular interpretation for the whole without such inversion. Overlaps occur when singulatives portion es, as in the Welsh example above, transforming uncountable aggregates into countable entities. In languages employing singulatives, this affixation reduces dependence on external classifiers or measures, allowing mass-like nouns to integrate more seamlessly into counting systems.

With Collective Nouns

In languages featuring the singulative number, collective nouns typically serve as the unmarked base form, denoting a group or aggregate as a unified whole rather than discrete individuals. These collectives often lack explicit morphology and instead imply a or sum of entities, such as a flock, , or cluster, treated grammatically as singular despite their plural reference. This contrasts with standard number systems where the singular is the basic form and plurals are derived. The singulative opposes this by marking the individual unit extracted from the collective, often through suffixes that shift the semantics from aggregate to discrete entity. For instance, in Welsh, the collective noun gwydd refers to "weeds" as an undifferentiated group, while the singulative gwydden (formed with the -en) denotes a single weed, emphasizing individuation. Similarly, in like Upper Sorbian, sněh (, collective) becomes sněženka (a , singulative), highlighting the morphological marking that inverts the typical singular-plural hierarchy. This morphological inversion positions collectives as the default lexical form in such systems, with singulatives added to express distribution or separation into units, allowing speakers to navigate between holistic and atomic perspectives. In Welsh, collectives like blew (hair, as a mass) yield singulatives such as blewyn (a single hair) via diminutive suffixes like -yn, underscoring the derived status of the individual. The singulatives themselves can often be pluralized, creating forms like Welsh gwyddeni (multiple weeds) from gwydden, which introduces a three-way distinction: collective (group), singulative (one), and plural of singulative (many individuals). Theoretically, collectives prioritize conceptual unity and indivisibility of the group, whereas singulatives stress division and , reflecting a scale where aggregates precede bounded units in grammatical encoding. This opposition enables nuanced expression of granularity, as seen in Welsh collectives for habitually co-occurring entities like or , which pluralize differently from singulatives to maintain the unity-division dynamic. In Arabic, for example, the collective burtogaal (, as a group) shifts to the feminine singulative burtogaala(h) (one orange), with its burtogaalaat functioning as a "counting plural" distinct from the collective's weaker, sum-like reference.

Plurative Number

The plurative number represents a grammatical category in which the plural form is morphologically marked, deriving from an unmarked singular base form, thereby serving as the conceptual inverse of the singulative number, where the singular is marked from an unmarked or general base. In plurative systems, the basic form typically denotes a single entity, and explicit marking—often via suffixes, , or other morphological processes—indicates multiplicity or a set of individuals. This pattern aligns with the cross-linguistic tendency to mark less frequent or more specific forms, as usage often requires additional specification beyond the default singular. Examples of plurative marking appear in various language families, including some , where nouns are generally unmarked for singular and receive suffixes to denote plurality. In Garrwa, a non-Pama-Nyungan of , the singular daru ("uninitiated boy") becomes daru-muku ("uninitiated boys") through the -muku. Similarly, in Warlpiri, a Pama-Nyungan , the -patu can mark plurality with implications of a complete set, as in yapa-patu ("[all] the people"). Such constructions are attested in isolates and small families, though they contrast with the more elaborate number systems in other regions. Plurative systems explicitly encode multiplicity from a singular foundation, differing from singulatives, which highlight the rarity or specificity of individuals against a backdrop of reference; this asymmetry reflects usage-based principles where rarer forms receive overt marking. Pluratives frequently co-occur with other number distinctions in languages featuring complex categories, such as dual forms alongside , as seen in many Australian pronominal paradigms that distinguish singular, dual, and . Typologically, while basic plurative marking is widespread as the dominant pattern for number , full plurative derivations within -based systems (as counterparts to singulatives) are less common, often appearing in languages with minimal or generalized number marking to avoid ambiguity in quantification.

Individualizers in Morphology

Individualizers refer to derivational affixes in morphology that form countable units or individuals from or generic nouns, functioning to impose on otherwise unindividuated referents, though they differ from grammatical singulatives by operating within lexical word-formation rather than core inflectional number paradigms. Unlike inflectional singulatives, which are obligatory for expressing singularity in specific number systems, individualizers are typically optional and may convey additional connotations beyond mere counting, such as smallness or endearment. In English, the suffix -let serves as a diminutive individualizer, deriving nouns that denote small or specific units, as in piglet from pig, where it creates a countable individual with an affectionate nuance rather than strictly partitioning a mass. This suffix exhibits moderate productivity, attaching primarily to concrete nouns to form new lexical items that emphasize individuality, though it does not systematically apply to all mass nouns. Slavic languages employ diminutive suffixes as individualizers, often shifting mass nouns to countable forms with semantic overtones of smallness or informality. In Russian, the suffix -ka derives bumažka "piece of paper" from bumaga "paper," individualizing the mass into a discrete unit, while vodichka informally refers to a drop from voda "water," blending individuation with diminutive affection. These formations are lexical derivations, not required for grammatical number agreement, and their productivity varies by semantic class, being more common with concrete masses than abstract ones. In Asian languages, numeral classifiers act as morphological individualizers, specifying units for or unclassified nouns to enable counting. For example, in , the classifier bēi individualizes liquids like (shuǐ) as "a of " (yī bēi shuǐ), transforming the into a countable portion without inherent meaning. These classifiers are highly productive in classifier languages, obligatory in numeral constructions, yet derivational in their role of categorizing and individuating referents based on , function, or inherent properties. The overlap between individualizers and singulatives lies in their shared function of denoting discrete units, but individualizers are distinguished by their derivational status, lexical obligatoriness, and frequent semantic nuances like affection, contrasting with the grammatical obligatoriness of singulatives in systems like Welsh or Maltese. In broader morphological terms, these affixes contribute to word-formation strategies for , with influenced by base noun semantics—higher for tangible masses—and allowing nuanced expressions that balance counting with expressive or contextual needs.

References

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