Coppock, ElizabethNouri-Hosseini, GolsaBogal-Allbritten, ElizabethStiefeling, Saskia2018-03-282018-03-282017E Coppock, Golsa Nouri-Hosseini, Elizabeth Bogal-Allbritten, Saskia Stiefeling. 2017. "Proportional implies relative: A typological universal." Proceedings of the Linguistics Society of America 2https://hdl.handle.net/2144/27881We give evidence from a geographically, genetically, and typologically diverse set of languages (drawn from 26 different language families and every continent) for the following typological universal: Regardless of the morphosyntactic strategy used by a language to form superlatives, if superlative morphosyntax can be applied to much or many, then the result can be used to express a relative reading (as in Hillary has visited the most continents (out of everyone)) but not necessarily a proportional reading (as in Hillary has visited most of the continents). Thus, no language deploys the regular superlative of much/many for the proportional but not the relative reading. We also give a rough estimate of how rare proportional readings for quantity superlatives are: about 10%. Nevertheless, we show that proportional readings arise with a diverse set of strategies for forming superlatives, and discuss the cases of Basque, Hausa, and Georgean (the last of which is most surprising).Copyright (c) 2017 Elizabeth Coppock, Elizabeth Bogal-Allbritten, Golsa Nouri-Hosseini, Saskia Stiefeling. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Proportional implies relative: A typological universalBook chapter