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Reduplicative constructions in Manda...
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Gan, Zhikang.
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Reduplicative constructions in Mandarin Chinese.
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Reduplicative constructions in Mandarin Chinese./
Author:
Gan, Zhikang.
Description:
129 p.
Notes:
Adviser: Sheila Embleton.
Contained By:
Dissertation Abstracts International57-01A.
Subject:
Language, Linguistics. -
Online resource:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=NN03795
ISBN:
9780612037953
Reduplicative constructions in Mandarin Chinese.
Gan, Zhikang.
Reduplicative constructions in Mandarin Chinese.
- 129 p.
Adviser: Sheila Embleton.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--York University (Canada), 1993.
Mandarin Chinese is commonly believed to be a highly analytical language that lacks formal morphological processes. However, reduplication, a special case of affixation, is found to be a quite pervasive and productive strategy in word formation and grammatical inflection in the language. Traditional scholarship (e.g., Wang (1963), Li (1964), Lu (1964), Chao (1968), Li & Thompson (1981)) on the subject seems to be rather inadequate and disorganized. Recent attempts to address the issue from a morphophonological perspective, particularly the autosegmental approach led by McCarthy (1979, 1981), Marantz (1982), Broselow & McCarthy (1983) among others, or from the integrative approach of lexical phonology and prosodic analysis (e.g., Chiang (1992)) have provided some new insights into the question of replication. However, the uniqueness of the data from the Chinese language seems to require a more specific descriptive analysis. This investigation adopts a new and more inclusive definition of reduplication for the specific Chinese data and provides a comprehensive analysis of the phenomenon across all major substantive word classes of the language. It recognizes two distinct types of reduplication processes in the language: inflectional reduplication (IR) (or proper reduplication) and derivational reduplication (DR) based on the generally accepted principles of contemporary morphological theories as well as the unique features of the Chinese language. A complete list of reduplicative constructions in Mandarin Chinese is provided, together with the discussion of their potential syntactic and semantic implications. This investigation also attempts to shed light on some of the related concepts used in traditional Chinese philological literature and to give a unified account of the seemingly diverse data of reduplication in Chinese.
ISBN: 9780612037953Subjects--Topical Terms:
1018079
Language, Linguistics.
Reduplicative constructions in Mandarin Chinese.
LDR
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129 p.
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Adviser: Sheila Embleton.
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Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 57-01, Section: A, page: 0192.
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Thesis (Ph.D.)--York University (Canada), 1993.
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Mandarin Chinese is commonly believed to be a highly analytical language that lacks formal morphological processes. However, reduplication, a special case of affixation, is found to be a quite pervasive and productive strategy in word formation and grammatical inflection in the language. Traditional scholarship (e.g., Wang (1963), Li (1964), Lu (1964), Chao (1968), Li & Thompson (1981)) on the subject seems to be rather inadequate and disorganized. Recent attempts to address the issue from a morphophonological perspective, particularly the autosegmental approach led by McCarthy (1979, 1981), Marantz (1982), Broselow & McCarthy (1983) among others, or from the integrative approach of lexical phonology and prosodic analysis (e.g., Chiang (1992)) have provided some new insights into the question of replication. However, the uniqueness of the data from the Chinese language seems to require a more specific descriptive analysis. This investigation adopts a new and more inclusive definition of reduplication for the specific Chinese data and provides a comprehensive analysis of the phenomenon across all major substantive word classes of the language. It recognizes two distinct types of reduplication processes in the language: inflectional reduplication (IR) (or proper reduplication) and derivational reduplication (DR) based on the generally accepted principles of contemporary morphological theories as well as the unique features of the Chinese language. A complete list of reduplicative constructions in Mandarin Chinese is provided, together with the discussion of their potential syntactic and semantic implications. This investigation also attempts to shed light on some of the related concepts used in traditional Chinese philological literature and to give a unified account of the seemingly diverse data of reduplication in Chinese.
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School code: 0267.
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http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=NN03795
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