About
Greville G. Corbett
University of Surrey

Main areas of research
- Inflectional morphology
- Language typology
- Morphosyntactic features
- Language acquisition
Bio
Greville G. Corbett is Distinguished Professor of Linguistics (emeritus) within the Surrey Morphology Group. He works on the typology of features, as in Gender (1991), Number (2000), Agreement (2006) and Features (2012), all with Cambridge University Press. With several colleagues, he has been developing the canonical approach to typology. Within that approach he has papers in Language, on suppletion (2007) and on internal and external splits (2015, 2023). He is a Fellow of the British Academy and of the Academy of Social Sciences, a Member of the Academia Europaea and an Honorary Member of the Linguistic Society of America.
This Keynote lecture will be given alongside Sebastian Fedden
Keynote Lecture
Unpacking nominal classification: a new perspective on gender and classifiers
Outline
Nominal classification remains a central topic in linguistic research, but advancing our understanding calls for a fundamental rethinking of how we approach its typology. The long-standing assumption that gender and classifiers represent opposing categories has often hindered efforts to construct satisfying typologies. However, empirical studies over recent decades have increasingly revealed languages that challenge this binary view—namely, those with intermediate systems that blend features traditionally attributed to either gender or classifiers, as well as those with multiple systems of nominal classification. We propose a typology based on four clearly defined criteria that together span the logical space of nominal classification systems. Each criterion is carefully elaborated and exemplified with data from a diverse set of languages. This approach is designed to capture gender and classifier systems in a single coherent typology; it allows for intermediate cases, and thus facilitates comparisons of apparently widely differing systems. This ‘intellectual housekeeping’ is intended to be of value both to linguists involved in describing challenging systems and to provide a firmer base for experimental work.