We investigate adjective ordering preferences in Mandarin, a language that has been claimed to have English-like preferences, but only in the absence of the linking particle de (Sproat & Shih 1991). Extending the experimental methodology of Scontras et al. (2017), we find evidence of robust adjective ordering preferences in Mandarin when de is present. Moreover, the Mandarin preferences are predicted by adjective subjectivity, as in English and other unrelated languages
I propose that ordering restrictions among adjectives (e.g., the big gray poodle) are driven by the ...
Recent research has proposed that adjective form (i.e., whether adjectives typically occur before or...
Ordering of predicative adjectives within the Noun Phrase varies cross linguistically in systematic ...
We investigate adjective ordering preferences in Mandarin, a language that has been claimed to have ...
From English to Hungarian to Mokilese, speakers exhibit strong ordering preferences in multi-adjecti...
Previous studies have shown that speakers have robust adjective ordering preferences. For example, i...
Adjective ordering preferences are robustly attested in English and many unrelated languages. In nom...
Adults have a collective tendency to choose certain adjective orderings in nominals with multiple ad...
We contrasted two hypotheses concerning how speakers determine adjective order during referential co...
L1 influence on second language acquisition has been shown by linguists in many areas. This study is...
The goal of the present study is to investigates the relation between syntax and semantics. To this ...
Typological data shows a tendency for languages to exhibit harmonic (i.e. consistent) ordering betwe...
It has long been known that native speakers judge nonlexical forms as more acceptable the more lexic...
In this paper, aiming to automatically distinguish subjective words from objective ones in Chinese, ...
Which is more correct, the “big fat cat” or the “fat big cat?” Why is a particular order preferred? ...
I propose that ordering restrictions among adjectives (e.g., the big gray poodle) are driven by the ...
Recent research has proposed that adjective form (i.e., whether adjectives typically occur before or...
Ordering of predicative adjectives within the Noun Phrase varies cross linguistically in systematic ...
We investigate adjective ordering preferences in Mandarin, a language that has been claimed to have ...
From English to Hungarian to Mokilese, speakers exhibit strong ordering preferences in multi-adjecti...
Previous studies have shown that speakers have robust adjective ordering preferences. For example, i...
Adjective ordering preferences are robustly attested in English and many unrelated languages. In nom...
Adults have a collective tendency to choose certain adjective orderings in nominals with multiple ad...
We contrasted two hypotheses concerning how speakers determine adjective order during referential co...
L1 influence on second language acquisition has been shown by linguists in many areas. This study is...
The goal of the present study is to investigates the relation between syntax and semantics. To this ...
Typological data shows a tendency for languages to exhibit harmonic (i.e. consistent) ordering betwe...
It has long been known that native speakers judge nonlexical forms as more acceptable the more lexic...
In this paper, aiming to automatically distinguish subjective words from objective ones in Chinese, ...
Which is more correct, the “big fat cat” or the “fat big cat?” Why is a particular order preferred? ...
I propose that ordering restrictions among adjectives (e.g., the big gray poodle) are driven by the ...
Recent research has proposed that adjective form (i.e., whether adjectives typically occur before or...
Ordering of predicative adjectives within the Noun Phrase varies cross linguistically in systematic ...