Question

Acehnese (“ah-chay-NEEZ”) lacks this grammatical feature everywhere except in its first-personal pronouns. Classical Arabic’s word for “camel” uniquely admits eight possible options for this grammatical feature. The Tanoan (-5[1])languages Kiowa and Jemez (“HAY-mez”) feature a rare “inverse” form of this grammatical feature, which marks whether this feature has the expected status for its noun class. Besides (-5[1])recursion and color, Daniel Everett argued that the Pirahã language lacks both this feature and any words (10[1])for related concepts. The “paucal” (-5[1])form of this feature is most closely approximated by the English phrase “a few.” For 10 points, name this grammatical feature in which words are modified according to the quantities involved, (10[1])such as English’s singular and plural. ■END■ (10[2]0[1])

ANSWER: grammatical number [accept quantity until read; accept singular or plural until read]
<Chicago A, Social Science>
= Average correct buzz position

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Buzzes

PlayerTeamOpponentBuzz PositionValue
Nikhil ChellamNorthwestern ANotre Dame A26-5
Matt ShinnickGeorgetown ANorthwestern B53-5
Roan DowlingIowaStanford B7010
Ben KoberleinNotre Dame BPurdue75-5
Will SandersNotre Dame CGeorgetown B10610
Jacob PuthipirojNorthwestern BGeorgetown A1130
Maya KvaratskheliaNotre Dame ANorthwestern A11310
Davis JohnsonPurdueNotre Dame B11310

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California2025-02-01Y3100%0%67%96.33
Great Lakes2025-02-01Y6100%0%0%79.67
Lower Mid-Atlantic2025-02-01Y6100%0%0%93.67
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Southeast2025-02-01Y3100%0%33%102.67
UK2025-02-01Y1090%0%40%76.89