This paper is one argument for a theory of grammatical relations in Chinese in which there are no grammatical relations beyond semantic roles, and no lexical relation-changing rules. As the passive rule is one of the most common relation changing rules cross-linguistically, in this paper I will address the question of whether or not Mandarin Chinese has lexical passives, that is, passives defined as in Relational Grammar (see for example Perlmutter and Postal 1977) and the early Lexical Functional Grammar (LFG) literature (e.g. Bresnan 1982), where a 2-arc (object) is promoted to a 1-arc (subject)
This paper has three goals: to show that the Mandarin bei is a unified construction, to explore a un...
This article combines the corpus-based and contrastive approaches, seeking to provide a systematic a...
In both traditional grammars and more recent analyses of Mandarin, sentences containing bèi have alw...
This paper is one argument for a theory of grammatical relations in Chinese in which there are no gr...
The goal of this paper is to defend the complementation approach to Chinese passives and discuss its...
This thesis examines the syntactic properties of passive constructions in Mandarin Chinese within ...
There are two types of passive constructions in Chinese. Type I is a syntactic passive since it is d...
This thesis discusses the Mandarin Chinese passive, a construction that differs in significant ways ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2015-12In this dissertation, I study the diachronic develo...
This thesis combines corpus-based and contrastive approaches, seeking to provide a systematic explan...
This paper shows that non-canonical passives (like English get- and Chinese bei-passives) exhibit a ...
This thesis analyses the previous research and key issues of non-marked passive sentences in Chinese...
In this thesis, a detailed syntactic and semantic analysis of passive, causative, dative and benefac...
This paper explores passive constructions in English and Chinese on the basis of written and spoken ...
LoC Class: PL1074, LoC Subject Headings: Chinese language -- Grammar, Comparativ
This paper has three goals: to show that the Mandarin bei is a unified construction, to explore a un...
This article combines the corpus-based and contrastive approaches, seeking to provide a systematic a...
In both traditional grammars and more recent analyses of Mandarin, sentences containing bèi have alw...
This paper is one argument for a theory of grammatical relations in Chinese in which there are no gr...
The goal of this paper is to defend the complementation approach to Chinese passives and discuss its...
This thesis examines the syntactic properties of passive constructions in Mandarin Chinese within ...
There are two types of passive constructions in Chinese. Type I is a syntactic passive since it is d...
This thesis discusses the Mandarin Chinese passive, a construction that differs in significant ways ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2015-12In this dissertation, I study the diachronic develo...
This thesis combines corpus-based and contrastive approaches, seeking to provide a systematic explan...
This paper shows that non-canonical passives (like English get- and Chinese bei-passives) exhibit a ...
This thesis analyses the previous research and key issues of non-marked passive sentences in Chinese...
In this thesis, a detailed syntactic and semantic analysis of passive, causative, dative and benefac...
This paper explores passive constructions in English and Chinese on the basis of written and spoken ...
LoC Class: PL1074, LoC Subject Headings: Chinese language -- Grammar, Comparativ
This paper has three goals: to show that the Mandarin bei is a unified construction, to explore a un...
This article combines the corpus-based and contrastive approaches, seeking to provide a systematic a...
In both traditional grammars and more recent analyses of Mandarin, sentences containing bèi have alw...