Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2015-12In this dissertation, I study the diachronic development of passive construction from Archaic Chinese to Modern Mandarin. I classify the passive forms into two major groups: 1) the monoclausal passive. 2) the biclausal passive. I propose that the monoclausal passive is similar to English-type passive constructions in that they involve a defective passive light verb. This type of passive can be traced back to the JIAN passive in Archaic Chinese. The Middle Chinese agentless BEI passive and Modern Mandarin short passive have the same structure as the JIAN passive. These three constructions can be viewed as three manifestations of a same recurring pattern. The biclausal passive developed from th...
This paper is one argument for a theory of grammatical relations in Chinese in which there are no gr...
This paper revisits the categorial status of the Mandarin passive marker bei and the derivational re...
This paper explores passive constructions in English and Chinese on the basis of written and spoken ...
This paper discusses the syntax, semantics and historical source of the new bèi XX construction in M...
This thesis discusses the Mandarin Chinese passive, a construction that differs in significant ways ...
LoC Class: PL1074, LoC Subject Headings: Chinese language -- Grammar, Comparativ
The passive in Mandarin has held the interest of researchers due to its controversial status, as a p...
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 ...
The goal of this paper is to defend the complementation approach to Chinese passives and discuss its...
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...
This paper shows that non-canonical passives (like English get- and Chinese bei-passives) exhibit a ...
The notional passive construction (NPC, henceforth) is claimed to be the most common form of passive...
This article combines the corpus-based and contrastive approaches, seeking to provide a systematic a...
This paper is one argument for a theory of grammatical relations in Chinese in which there are no gr...
This paper revisits the categorial status of the Mandarin passive marker bei and the derivational re...
This paper explores passive constructions in English and Chinese on the basis of written and spoken ...
This paper discusses the syntax, semantics and historical source of the new bèi XX construction in M...
This thesis discusses the Mandarin Chinese passive, a construction that differs in significant ways ...
LoC Class: PL1074, LoC Subject Headings: Chinese language -- Grammar, Comparativ
The passive in Mandarin has held the interest of researchers due to its controversial status, as a p...
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 ...
The goal of this paper is to defend the complementation approach to Chinese passives and discuss its...
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...
This paper shows that non-canonical passives (like English get- and Chinese bei-passives) exhibit a ...
The notional passive construction (NPC, henceforth) is claimed to be the most common form of passive...
This article combines the corpus-based and contrastive approaches, seeking to provide a systematic a...
This paper is one argument for a theory of grammatical relations in Chinese in which there are no gr...
This paper revisits the categorial status of the Mandarin passive marker bei and the derivational re...
This paper explores passive constructions in English and Chinese on the basis of written and spoken ...