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Modern Chinese Parts of Speech - Classification Theory (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,886
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Modern Chinese Parts of Speech - Classification Theory (Hardcover)
Series: Chinese Linguistics
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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What is the essence of a part of speech? Why is it difficult to
classify parts of speech? What are the bases and criteria for
classifying them? How should they be classified? In doing so, how
should a conversional word be dealt with? How should nomonalization
be treated? These are just some of the questions answered in this
book. The classification of parts of speech in Chinese is a tough
job due to the language's lack of morphological differences. Based
on the analysis of nearly 40,000 Chinese characters, this book
proposes that, essentially, a part of speech is not of
distributional type and that its intrinsic basis is an expressional
function and the semantic type. Essentially, large categories such
as substantive words, predicate words and modification words are
classes of words classified according to their expressional
functions. Basic categories such as nouns, verbs and adjectives are
classes that combine semantic types with syntactical functions. In
classifying parts of speech, the book pays attention not to
identifying a single distributive characteristic that is internally
universal and externally exclusive but to clustering the
grammatical functions that have the same classification value
through the "reflection-representation" relationship among
distribution, expressional function and semantic type (distribution
reflects expressional function and semantic type, which are, in
turn, represented as distribution), thereby identifying the
classification criteria. It uses distributional compatibility and
the correlation principle to analyze which distributional
differences represent differences in parts of speech and which do
not. In this way, grammatical functions that have equal
classification values are collected into one equivalent function
cluster, each of which represents one part of speech. The book uses
four strategies to classify parts of speech, namely the homogeneity
strategy, the homomorphical strategy, the priority homomorphical
strategy and the consolidation strategy. It will be a valuable
reference for Chinese linguistic researchers and students as well
as Chinese learners.
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