Since the second half of the 1910s, a major movement in China for the reform of the language arose. The goal of this linguistic revolution was to overcome the discrepancy between the archaic-sounding written language and the non-standardized spoken varieties. A uniform language, with standardized spoken and written forms, was necessary for the literacy of the masses; this, in turn, could help them take part in the wider process of cultural modernization of the country. Modernization of the language implied also the modernization of its grammatical description, which had before been modelled on Western categories. During the 1910s and the 1920s, Chinese linguists started a criticism of Western grammatical categories and tried to design new c...