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By studying the emergence, development, structure, and pattern, the
two-volume set seeks to reconstruct the ancient rhyme Chinese
tables based on extant materials and findings. A rhyme table is a
tabulated tool constituted by phonological properties, which helps
indicate the pronunciation of sinograms or Chinese characters,
marking an accurate and systematic account of the Chinese
phonological system. The first volume discusses its formation and
evolution and analyzes the structure and arrangement patterns of
rhyme tables in detail. The author gives insights into principles
for some irregular cases (menfa rules) and the nature of
“division” (deng), a method of classifying and differentiating
speech sounds vital to the reconstruction of Middle Chinese. The
second volume first explores the relationship and identifies the
prototype of the extant rhyme tables and then presents the
reconstructed rhyme tables with detailed annotations and add-on
indexes. The book will appeal to scholars and students studying
Sinology, Chinese linguistics, and especially Chinese phonology.
"Contrastive Linguistics" is the first book written by a linguist
from mainland China on the histories and principles of comparing
and contrasting Chinese and Western languages, specifically
English. From Wilhelm von Humboldt's initial study in comparative
linguistics to the present day, traditional scholarship in
contrastive linguistics has taken a Western perspective and shown
how foreign languages relate to the Indo-European language family.
However, such a view has a limited scope, and there is an
alternative history to contrastive linguistics. This book is an
attempt by Professor Wenguo Pan to redress the balance in
contrastive linguistics, comparing Western languages to Chinese,
rather than vice versa. He provides a survey of contrastive
linguistics in China throughout the past century, and aims to open
a window for the world to see what the new generations of Chinese
linguists are doing in this exciting field, and to start a dialogue
between scholars of different backgrounds and linguistic
traditions. "Contrastive Linguistics" looks at the history of this
discipline both in Europe and in China. Professor Pan presents a
survey of the historical, philosophical and methodological
foundations of the discipline, but also examines its scope in
relation to general, comparative, anthropological and applied
linguistics. This book will be of interest to academics interested
in a new perspective on contrastive linguistics or Chinese
linguistics.
The first serious attempt that challenges the theoretical
foundation of Bernhard Karlgren’s system which has dominated
Chinese phonological study for a century Proposes a new theory of
dental-pivot hypothesis in the deng-rhyme studies A clear account
of the difference of the two major arguments on the nature of
qieyun, the basic material in Chinese phonological study
The first serious attempt that challenges the theoretical
foundation of Bernhard Karlgren’s system which has dominated
Chinese phonological study for a century Proposes a new theory of
dental-pivot hypothesis in the deng-rhyme studies A clear account
of the difference of the two major arguments on the nature of
qieyun, the basic material in Chinese phonological study
Contrastive Linguistics is the first book written by a linguist
from mainland China on the histories and principles of comparing
and contrasting Chinese and Western languages, specifically
English. From Wilhelm von Humboldt's initial study in comparative
linguistics to the present day, traditional scholarship in
contrastive linguistics has taken a Western perspective and shown
how foreign languages relate to the Indo-European language family.
However, such a view has a limited scope, and there is an
alternative history to contrastive linguistics. This book is an
attempt by Professor Wenguo Pan to redress the balance in
contrastive linguistics, comparing Western languages to Chinese,
rather than vice versa. He provides a survey of contrastive
linguistics in China throughout the past century, and aims to open
a window for the world to see what the new generations of Chinese
linguists are doing in this exciting field, and to start a dialogue
between scholars of different backgrounds and linguistic
traditions. Contrastive Linguistics looks at the history of this
discipline both in Europe and in China. Professor Pan presents a
survey of the historical, philosophical and methodological
foundations of the discipline, but also examines its scope in
relation to general, comparative, anthropological and applied
linguistics. This book will be of interest to academics interested
in a new perspective on contrastive linguistics or Chinese
linguistics.
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