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Why superordinate category terms can be mass nouns

Cognition, 1985
Abstract This paper offers an explanation as to why many superordinate category terms are mass nouns (e.g., furniture, jewelry, money) although they refer to diverse, discrete, countable objects. This violates the semantic basis of typical mass terms which refer to mass-like relatively homogeneous substances, such as milk or sand.
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Collective nouns, aggregate nouns, and superordinates

Lingvisticae Investigationes, 2010
‘Part of’ and ‘kind of’ relations in the lexicon have been matter of some linguistic research, but strangely enough, they have only rarely been investigated together. Strangely, since ‘part of’ and ‘kind of’ appear to be similar in a number of respects, and since nouns such as furniture or bétail combine both ‘part of’ and ‘kind of’ readings.
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toward a sociology of the superordinate

2018
To run or walk into a strong headwind is to understand the power of nature. You set your jaw in a squared grimace, your eyes are slits against the wind, and you breathe with a fierce determination. And still you make so little progress.
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It's a Superordinate Puzzlement

Contemporary Psychology: A Journal of Reviews, 1968
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