This paper identifies a number of different pathways that give rise to sentence final particles in Chinese. In particular, it focuses on a strategy referred to as ‗clausal integration‘. Diachronic evidence is given for the emergence of sentence final particles er yi yi and ye yi yi in Old Chinese. Additional examples are further provided from Early Modern Chinese and contemporary Chinese to show that the process of clausal integration is a highly robust, recursive process that gives rise to numerous pragmatic markers at the right periphery within the Chinese language, with possible implications for other languages as well
The purpose of the present study was to provide a modern syntactic analysis of Shanghainese, the reg...
This paper shows that the complex directional complement occurred in Late Medieval Chinese (during t...
Due to its occurrence in sentence final position, the sentence particle (SP) is sometimes taken to b...
This thesis, based on corpus data, investigates eight sentence-final particles in Mandarin Chinese (...
Author name used in this publication: 葉鳳霞Author name used in this publication: 王佼Author name used in...
Chinese is often taken as a prime example of an isolating language. Most relation marking takes the ...
Due to its occurrence in sentence final position, the sentence particle (SP) is sometimes taken to b...
Bai(2006) discusses that higher-level explicatures are typically realized in sentence final particle...
A common phenomenon—at least among East Asian languages—is the recruitment of determiners into nomin...
International audienceThe present article presents an in-depth analysis of the head-final three-laye...
PACLIC 21 / Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea / November 1-3, 2007conference pape
This paper reports a study on the application of the theory of pivotal clause in chinese language pr...
The main concern of this dissertation is Chinese word order, with a special focus on Chinese relativ...
[[abstract]]This study investigates the linguistic phenomenon of utterance-final particles (UFPs) in...
170 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2005.Chinese sentence-final partic...
The purpose of the present study was to provide a modern syntactic analysis of Shanghainese, the reg...
This paper shows that the complex directional complement occurred in Late Medieval Chinese (during t...
Due to its occurrence in sentence final position, the sentence particle (SP) is sometimes taken to b...
This thesis, based on corpus data, investigates eight sentence-final particles in Mandarin Chinese (...
Author name used in this publication: 葉鳳霞Author name used in this publication: 王佼Author name used in...
Chinese is often taken as a prime example of an isolating language. Most relation marking takes the ...
Due to its occurrence in sentence final position, the sentence particle (SP) is sometimes taken to b...
Bai(2006) discusses that higher-level explicatures are typically realized in sentence final particle...
A common phenomenon—at least among East Asian languages—is the recruitment of determiners into nomin...
International audienceThe present article presents an in-depth analysis of the head-final three-laye...
PACLIC 21 / Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea / November 1-3, 2007conference pape
This paper reports a study on the application of the theory of pivotal clause in chinese language pr...
The main concern of this dissertation is Chinese word order, with a special focus on Chinese relativ...
[[abstract]]This study investigates the linguistic phenomenon of utterance-final particles (UFPs) in...
170 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2005.Chinese sentence-final partic...
The purpose of the present study was to provide a modern syntactic analysis of Shanghainese, the reg...
This paper shows that the complex directional complement occurred in Late Medieval Chinese (during t...
Due to its occurrence in sentence final position, the sentence particle (SP) is sometimes taken to b...