金沢大学One finds in Mandarin Chinese constructions incorporating the word bei. These are most often likened to passive constructions in Western languages. Indeed, there is a prima facie resemblance between the bei construction
This thesis combines corpus-based and contrastive approaches, seeking to provide a systematic explan...
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 paper has three goals: to show that the Mandarin bei is a unified construction, to explore a un...
In both traditional grammars and more recent analyses of Mandarin, sentences containing bei have alw...
This paper revisits the categorial status of the Mandarin passive marker bei and the derivational re...
This paper studies the nature of the BEI-construction in Cantonese, with Mandarin as the standard l...
The goal of this paper is to defend the complementation approach to Chinese passives and discuss its...
Previous syntactic analyses of the bei-passive in Chinese hold controversial stances on its true sta...
The passive marker bei has been the subject of a significant quantity of linguistic research; howeve...
The paper aims to explore the accessibility of the popular Chinese ironical bei-construction to Engl...
This paper addresses the question: what licenses the complement of a Mandarin passive construction? ...
This paper explores passive constructions in English and Chinese on the basis of written and spoken ...
International audienceThis chapter discusses internal variation in Sinitic concerning verb complemen...
This thesis discusses the Mandarin Chinese passive, a construction that differs in significant ways ...
This thesis combines corpus-based and contrastive approaches, seeking to provide a systematic explan...
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 paper has three goals: to show that the Mandarin bei is a unified construction, to explore a un...
In both traditional grammars and more recent analyses of Mandarin, sentences containing bei have alw...
This paper revisits the categorial status of the Mandarin passive marker bei and the derivational re...
This paper studies the nature of the BEI-construction in Cantonese, with Mandarin as the standard l...
The goal of this paper is to defend the complementation approach to Chinese passives and discuss its...
Previous syntactic analyses of the bei-passive in Chinese hold controversial stances on its true sta...
The passive marker bei has been the subject of a significant quantity of linguistic research; howeve...
The paper aims to explore the accessibility of the popular Chinese ironical bei-construction to Engl...
This paper addresses the question: what licenses the complement of a Mandarin passive construction? ...
This paper explores passive constructions in English and Chinese on the basis of written and spoken ...
International audienceThis chapter discusses internal variation in Sinitic concerning verb complemen...
This thesis discusses the Mandarin Chinese passive, a construction that differs in significant ways ...
This thesis combines corpus-based and contrastive approaches, seeking to provide a systematic explan...
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...