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Inlinguistics,universal grinder is the idea that in some languages, mostcount nouns can be used as if they weremass nouns, which causes a slight change in their meaning. The term "universal grinder" was first used in print by F. Jeffry Pelletier in 1975, after a personal suggestion byDavid Lewis.[1]
Related concepts, theuniversal sorter anduniversal packager refer to similar processes that allow mass nouns to be used as count nouns.
The idea of the "universal grinder" is that, while count nouns usually denote whole, distinct objects (such asa steak,two steaks), the equivalent mass noun connotes a non-distinct quantity of whatever constitutes these objects (some steak). The universal grinder suggests that most count nouns can be used as mass nouns, when the distinct thing named by the noun will be thought of as a general quantity.
While the "universal grinder" can be used in manyIndo-European languages, most particularlyEnglish andDutch, it does not apply in all languages; there is considerable cross-linguistic variation in themorphology and semantics of the mass/count and singular/plural distinctions. For example, bare count nouns inMandarin Chinese do not receive mass interpretations: a sentence such asQiáng-shang dōu shì gǒu (墙上都是狗) can only be interpreted as 'There are dogs all over the wall,' not as 'There is dog all over the wall.'[2]
The "universal sorter" describes one way in which mass nouns are understood when they are used in theplural. Harry Bunt suggested the universal sorter in his 1981 doctoral dissertation.[3] When an ordinarily uncountable noun such aswine appears with plural form (several wines), it can be understood as referring to various abstract kinds (for example, varieties of wine).[4]
The "universal packager" likewise describes how mass nouns are understood when they are used as countable nouns. In this case, the plural noun may be understood as naming individual servings or "packages" (e.g.two coffees may mean "two cups of coffee"), or as naming abstract kinds (two coffees can also refer to e.g.Colombian coffee andIndonesian coffee).[5] Some scholars use the phraseuniversal packager to refer to both the concrete and abstract understanding of plural nouns; others use it to refer only to the concrete sense, and useuniversal sorter for abstract meaning.[4]