Wednesday, December 07, 2011

Number transparency and determiner choice

A noun is said to be number transparent when the verb doesn't agree with it even when it functions as the subject in constructions like, A number of people were there. In this case, the head of the subject is singular number, but nevertheless, were agrees with plural people. What I just realized recently is that there's a big difference between a number and the number. In the COCA, [a number of * are/is] turns up 353 instances of are and only 19 of is, for a ratio of 18.6:1. In contrast, [the number of * are/is] results in only 16 instances of are and  291 of is, for a ratio of 1:18.2, almost exactly inverse.

Other determiners have other patterns. The are to is ratios are:
  • any number:  7:2
  • this number: 0:2
  • that number: 1:4
  • some number: 1:0
  • etc.

9 comments:

  1. It's not the number that was there; it's the people that were there. On the other hand, if one were to say "The number of people there was/were greater on Saturday than on Friday," it's the number we're talking about so it would be "the number ... was ..."

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  2. From a semantic viewpoint, it's the people who are there, but syntactically, it's hard to see how you would parse this such that people is the subject.

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  3. Interesting. So the choice of are or is is selected by whether the determinative is indefinite or definite (respectively).

    A, any, and some are indefinite, and select are; and the, this, and that are definite, and select is.

    Looking at some of the data further suggests that it's more than a tendency. It might be a rule. [a number of * is] produces results like:

    "what we are attempting to do and are in discussions now with a number of developers is move to some alternatives"

    "but to talk in terms of a number of decades is not helpful"

    "the exact screening language that we've been living by for a number of years isn't necessarily carved in stone"

    In all but one hit in this query, the phrase "a number of *" is not the subject that is selecting is; that phrase is embedded in a modifier that just happens to be to the left of is.

    The one query that matches the intended pattern is:

    "But a number of developments is on its way."

    This sentence seems (to me at least) to be emphasizing "number" as the subject, and not "developments".

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  4. Maybe it's because I don't know that much about linguistics but it seems to me that you parse this so that people is the subject by seeing [a] number of as a determiner.

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  5. Yes, I've seen a number of books do that, but the problem I see is that a number of isn't a constituent. See my explanation here.

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  6. For standard EFL explanations, you can take a look at _Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English_ (5th), where we are simply told 'Use a singular verb after _the number of_ ... Use a plural verb after _a number of_'.

    For analyses of the structure of _a number of_, see CGEL pp351-52. It is a messy area in English grammar.

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  7. I agree with Faldone; it has to do with semantics. It's possible to trigger number-transparency with definite "number", it just takes effort to construct a sentence with definite "number" where the semantic subject is whatever it's a number of. For example, Google finds:

    > Her story proved to me that even if the majority didn't do any kind of resistance, the small number of people who did were able to save valuable lives.

    > [...] why no young women “went out” in the 1970s, and why the small number who did were all married [...]

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  8. Rick Sprague3:37 PM

    If a Beckner/Bybee gradual transition is underway, wouldn't you expect that different constructions shift their grammatical analyses at different times? So a number of might have to be analyzed ambiguously, and independently from of whom a number during the transition. Otherwise, how could it be gradual?

    Maybe I've been thinking about this too long, but the following doesn't seem entirely impossible to me:
    The magician asked for volunteers from the audience, of whom a number of were selected as subjects.
    Right now, to me, this sounds like a grammatical slip, the kind anyone might make in rapid continuous speech. I might even accept it as informal right now. But it's completely intelligible, and redundant preposition insertion is a known, accepted phenomenon. If it became commonplace, would there be any more doubt that a number of was functioning as a determinative, even while the number of remained a non-constituent?

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  9. "If it became commonplace, would there be any more doubt that a number of was functioning as a determinative, even while the number of remained a non-constituent?"

    Under those conditions, I believe you would be right. Currently, though, I don't think there's much evidence for it.

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