A numeral classifier is a member of a paradigm of words or morphemes which form a binary construction with a cardinal numeral, called classifier phrase. The classifier phrase, in turn, forms a binary construction with an individual noun (or count noun) designating what is being counted.
A mensurative (measure word) is a member of a paradigm of words which form a binary construction with a cardinal numeral, called measure phrase. The measure phrase, in turn, forms a binary construction with a mass noun designating what is being measured.
Most languages have mensuratives (Cabécar [Chibchan] has none). In many languages (including English), they number in the hundreds.
Some languages have numeral classifiers in addition to mensuratives (Cabécar has them although lacking mensuratives). There are never more than a few dozens of them.
The cover term for numeral classifiers and mensuratives is enumerative.
While the construction with the cardinal numeral is crucial for the numeral classifier, in some languages it combines with other words or morphemes, too. In Yucatec Maya and Cabécar, e.g., it also combines with the interrogative pronoun ‘how many’. In Mandarin Chinese, it also combines with demonstrative pronouns.
The distribution of the numeral classifiers and of the numerals in a language may be such that one does not occur without the other. In that case, it is difficult to ascertain their degree of structural autonomy. It is often assumed that the numeral must be a word, while the classifier is an affix. As a general default, such an assumption appears eurocentric. In Yucatec Maya, it turns out that the numeral never occurs freely, while there is at least one construction in which the numeral classifier is found without being in a binary construction with a numeral. Here, the numerals must be bound morphemes. Moreover, since many numeral classifiers stem, etymologically, from nouns or verbs, their word status may be expected in many languages.
The two classes of items may be distinguished by distributional criteria:
Sometimes there are no structural criteria to tell numeral classifiers and mensuratives apart. Then semantic criteria such as the following may be used:
M1
of X
is less than one M2
of X
’, e.g. a pinch of salt is less than a spoonful of salt, or even ‘ten M1
(of X
) make one M2
(of X
)’, e.g. three feet (of a string) make one yard (of a string), make sense if Mi
is a mensurative, while there are no such sentences for numeral classifiers.1 Incipient numeral classifiers, such as German Stück and Mann, do not fulfill this condition.