*Abstract *Among theories of mass-count distinction, there is a debate as
to whether the distinction exists at the lexico-semantic level, e.g. Link
1983, Krifka 1989, or is rather mediated through syntactic structure, e.g.
Borer 2005, Acquaviva 2019. One piece of evidence in favor of the latter
approach comes from classifier languages, in which all nouns seem to
exhibit mass-like behavior in that they cannot combine with a numeral
directly but only with the mediation of a classifier. In the present paper,
we examine Tashkent Uzbek, an obligatory classifier dialect of Uzbek
(Beckwith 1998, 2007). We argue that this language exhibits the mass-count
distinction even in the absence of classifiers or, if they are present, in
lower positions, before the classifiers are merged (at the NP/nP level). We
provide a formal analysis of a range of Uzbek classifiers, showing that
they are sensitive to the mass-count distinction (rather than constituting
a source thereof.) Thus, we provide evidence that the mass-count
distinction is lexically encoded in nouns even in classifier languages
(e.g. Cheng & Sybesma 1998, Doetjes 1997, Sudo 2016).