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Everything about Measure Word totally explained

Measure words, in linguistics, are words (or morphemes) that are used in combination with a numeral to indicate the count of nouns. Measure words often classify the noun they modify into some semantic class and consequently measure words are considered numeral classifiers, closely akin, but distinct from grammatical number. Measure words are most often used when counting. Their use is analogous to English words that represent units or portions of mass nouns, for example one drop of milk, fifty head of cattle, three pieces of cake. Measure words are part of the grammar of most East Asian languages, including Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese, Malay, Thai, and Hmong, plus Bengali just to the west of this area, as well as many Indigenous languages of the Americas near the Pacific coast, including Classic Maya. They also occur in some languages of the Amazon Basin and a very small number of West African languages.
   They are also known as counters, count words, counter words, or counting words.

Indo-European languages

In contrast to Asian languages and others, measure words are not grammatical in the case of most Indo-European languages including English.

English

English has a distinction between mass nouns and count nouns, and employs a small number of fixed words that can be considered semantically-oriented counters. Consider the following:
  • five head of cattle (said by ranchers)
  • ten stem of roses (said by florists)
  • three pair of pants (or pairs)
Note that the preceding measure words are singular in form. If they were plural, the first two phrases would have different meanings.
   Most measure words in English are more accurately called units of measurement. They are normal count nouns, not grammatical particles. A measure word is the only way to quantify a mass noun:
  • three cups of coffee
  • four kernels of corn, three ears of corn, two bushels of corn
  • one litre of water A water or a corn (taken in the sense of grain) don't make sense and are almost never heard.
       With count nouns, however, measure words are unnecessary. A number alone can be used as an adjective to modify the noun to be counted:
  • four pencils
  • three horses However you can't say "three cattles".
       English also features some cases in which the number and the measure word are combined as a single word: for example, when counting
  • golfers: twosome, threesome, foursome...

  • musicians: solo, duet, trio, quartet...

  • wombmates: twins, triplets, quadruplets.... See also collective noun for a concept related to measure words that's found in English.

    Bengali

    Although not typical for an Indo-European language, Bengali makes use of measure words. Every noun in this language must have its corresponding measure word (MW) when used with a numeral or other quantifier. Most nouns take the generic measure word ţa, although there are many more specific measure words, such as jon, which is only used to count humans. Still, the number of measure words in Bengali certainly doesn't compare to that of Chinese or Japanese. As in Chinese, Bengali nouns are not inflected for number.
    Bengali Literal English translation Normal English translation
    Nôe-ţa ghoŗi Nine-MW clock Nine clocks
    Kôe-ţa balish How.many-MW pillow How many pillows
    Ônek-jon lok Many-MW person Many people
    Char-pañch-jon shikkhôk Four-five-MW teacher Four or five teachers
    Similar to the situation in Chinese, measuring nouns in Bengali without their corresponding measure words (for example aţ biŗal instead of aţ-ţa biŗal "eight cats") would typically be considered ungrammatical. However, omitting the noun and preserving the measure word is grammatical and not uncommon to hear. For example, Shudhu êk-jon thakbe. (lit. "Only one-MW will remain.") would be understood to mean "Only one person will remain.", since jon can only be used to count humans. The word lok "person" is implied.

    East Asian languages

    Languages such as Ainu, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese, and Thai use measure words as the standard way of indicating the count of the number of items, rather than, as in most Indo-European languages, allowing numbers to count a noun directly.

    Chinese

    In Mandarin, nouns are not conjugated for singular or plural numerus; a noun without a classifier can be translated as either singular or plural. Classifiers are used when enumerating a count noun:
    Chinese Literal translation Grammatically correct/idiomatic translation


    Tā yǒu sān shuāng kuaìzi.
    He have three pair chopstick. He has three pairs of chopsticks.


    Nǐ yǒu méi yǒu qī zhāng zhuōzi?
    You have-not-have seven [flat-thingclassifier] table? Do you've seven tables?


    yī ge rén
    one [generalclassifier] person one person or a person
    Measure words are not used in Classical Chinese. In all dialects of modern Chinese, however, measure words are obligatory with enumeration of all count nouns; "yī rén" in modern Chinese when used as a measure word is grammatically incorrect. The choice of a classifier for each noun is a matter of grammar, is somewhat arbitrary–though frequently corresponds with a relatively well-defined classification of objects based on physical characteristics–and must be memorized by learners of Chinese. The classifier assigned to a noun often has an imagistic association with that object. Thus, zhāng has table as one of its meanings, and is used for large and thin objects. (Though uncommon, it's even possible to omit the noun if the choice of classifier makes the intended noun obvious–like the Bengali example above.) Not all classifier words derive from nouns. For example, the word can also be a verb meaning to grab, and is the measure word for objects that have handles.

    Japanese

    In Japanese grammar, most nouns are effectively mass nouns, and measure words must be used with a number when counting them. The appropriate measure word is chosen based on the kind and shape of the noun, and combines with the numeral, sometimes adopting several different forms. This is similar to noun classes in many African languages, except that the classifiers are used only when counting.
    Japanese English, literal English
    鉛筆五本
    enpitsu go-hon
    pencil five cylindrical-things five pencils
    犬三匹
    inu san-biki
    dog three animal-things three dogs
    子供四人
    kodomo yo-nin
    child four people-things four children

    niwatori san-wa
    chicken three bird-things three chickens
    ヨット三艘
    yotto san-sō
    yacht three boat-things three yachts
    車一台
    kuruma ichi-dai
    car one mechanical-thing one car
    トランプ二枚
    toranpu ni-mai
    playing card two flat-things two cards

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