This collection presents readers with the main thrust of current research on Chinese languages from the perspective of formal linguistics. Written by an international assembly of researchers in the field, the chapters offer an in-depth study of important theoretical issues and particular questions in contemporary Chinese linguistics, and serve as a useful reference for various areas of Chinese grammar. The 11 original articles in this volume include discussions of reflexivity, modifiers and nominal structures, tense, verbal constructions and sentence structures, onset change, suffixation, and first language acquisition. Equipped with a detailed index, this volume provides for all readers a valuable resource of and the greatest access to the field of formal Chinese linguistics today.
Sze-Wing Tang is Assistant Professor in the Department of Chinese and Bilingual Studies at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University, and President of the Linguistic Society of Hong Kong. Chen-Sheng Liu is Assistant Professor in the Department of Foreign Languages and Literature at the National Chi Nan University.
- Preface
- Part I: Syntax and Semantics
- Tense as a Grammatical Category in Chinese
Miao-Ling Hsieh
- Distributivity and Reflexivity
C.-T. James Huang
- Word Order, Structure and Relativization
Yen-Hui Audrey Li
- On the Status of ‘Modifying’ DE and the Structure of the Chinese DP
Andrew Simpson
- The Parametric Theory of Verb Movement and Its Consequences
Sze-Wing Tang
- Predemonstrative Modifiers
Alexander Williams
- Serial Verb Construction and Verbal Compounding
Ching-Huei Teresa Wu
- Wo pao-le ge feiknai and Reanalysis of the Classifier ge
Zoe Wu
- Focus Adverbs CAI and JIU in L1 Acquisition of Mandarin Chinese: A Preliminary Study
Xiaolu Yang
- Part II: Phonology
- The Role of Markedness in Onset Change
Moira Yip
- A Phonetically-Based OT Account for the /n/ - / ŋ / Asymmetry upon /- ɻ /-Suffixation in Northern Chinese Dialects
Jie Zhang
- Index
7/1/2002