A NEW LOOK AT CANTONESE EXPLETIVES

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Chinese keeps the simple form for the generality: JRANN,55 human beings, Man (with a capital!). QHUK, houses. DRIPV, plates. JRYHV, fish. CEAKS, foot-rules.

To particularize, whether by specifying as this or that, one, two, three or any small number, my, your, his (usually, as I mentioned, further specified by this or that), the appropriate congruence-class word precedes the noun, closely bound to the pronoun or numeral. Note that the use is the same whether singular or plural:

NHIGO-JRANN60 this person

SHAAMMGHAANN-QHUK6 three houses

JHATZEAK-DRIPV® one plate (the thing)

GEETRIW-JRYHV63 a few fish

NREE GORBAAR CEAK your (that) foot-rule.

Some students are mystified to find GEE “several, a few” used as a definite number. Some large numbers are also used with some nouns as though they were themselves measure-words (therefore requiring no second classifier).

Thus you hear

BAAKGEE-JRANN05 over a hundred people

BAAKGEE-GHAANN QHUK over a hundred houses

BAAKGEE-TRIW JRYHV67 over a hundred fish

Others are mystified, after learning always to include the “classifier" with numbers, to find the numeral directly bound to a measure-word. The explanation simply is that measure-words behave syntactically just like classifiers: this is one of the reasons it is impossible to compile a really comprehensive list of classifiers.

JHATDRIP-SUNG GORDRIP-JRYHV a plateful of not-rice that plate of fish

In the use of the pointing-words, whether personal or general, since they are nearly always, the demonstratives always, found bound to a congruence-class particle (or a measure word), there

55 人 60 呢個人 65 百幾人

56 A MEMA

66 TAMA

57 #

59 R

SH 煲碟

63 * *

64 你嗰把尺

GR 一碟送

69 PÆ##

62 一隻碟

67 TÁR

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