English is predominantly a tense language, whereas Chinese is exclusively an aspect language (c.f. Wang, 1943:151; Gao, 1948:189; Gong, 1991:252; Norman, 1988:163). While tense and aspect both provide temporal information, they are two different concepts. Tense is deictic in that it indicates the temporal location of a situation, i.e., its occurrence in relation to a specific reference time . Aspect is non-deictic in that it is related to the temporal shape of a situation, i.e., its internal temporal structure and ways of presentation, independent of its temporal location. As such, Chinese does not have the grammatical category of tense, because the concept denoted by tense is indicated by content words like adverbs of time or it is implied...
This paper reports on a pilot study of aspect marker generation in an English-to-Chinese translation...
Motivated by a systematic representation of the Chinese aspect forms that explores their intrinsic...
Languages differ in how systematically and obligatorily they encode conceptual categories such as te...
The current dissertation studies the problem of translation of tense and aspect between Chinese and ...
This paper uses an English-Chinese parallel corpus, an L1 Chinese comparable corpus, and an L1 Chine...
Chinese, as an aspect language, has played an important role in the development of aspect theory. Th...
Chinese, as an aspect language, has played an important role in the development of aspect theory. Th...
As an extension of the ESRC project Contrasting aspect and tense in English and Chinese (RES-000-22-...
This study examines verb tense and aspect choices in Chinese-into-English translation and compares t...
Mandarin Chinese does not grammaticalize tense, but makes abundant use of aspectual distinctions in ...
This paper presents the newly released Lancaster Corpus of Mandarin Chinese (LCMC), a Chinese match ...
Die vorliegende Dissertation nimmt eine korpusbasierte kontrastive Analyse von Tempus und Aspekt in ...
Verbal tense, defined as the “grammaticalization of location in time,” commonly serves in natural la...
n translating from Chinese to English, tense and other temporal information must be inferred from o...
Linguistic studies on the aspectual system of natural language have mainly focused on its semantics ...
This paper reports on a pilot study of aspect marker generation in an English-to-Chinese translation...
Motivated by a systematic representation of the Chinese aspect forms that explores their intrinsic...
Languages differ in how systematically and obligatorily they encode conceptual categories such as te...
The current dissertation studies the problem of translation of tense and aspect between Chinese and ...
This paper uses an English-Chinese parallel corpus, an L1 Chinese comparable corpus, and an L1 Chine...
Chinese, as an aspect language, has played an important role in the development of aspect theory. Th...
Chinese, as an aspect language, has played an important role in the development of aspect theory. Th...
As an extension of the ESRC project Contrasting aspect and tense in English and Chinese (RES-000-22-...
This study examines verb tense and aspect choices in Chinese-into-English translation and compares t...
Mandarin Chinese does not grammaticalize tense, but makes abundant use of aspectual distinctions in ...
This paper presents the newly released Lancaster Corpus of Mandarin Chinese (LCMC), a Chinese match ...
Die vorliegende Dissertation nimmt eine korpusbasierte kontrastive Analyse von Tempus und Aspekt in ...
Verbal tense, defined as the “grammaticalization of location in time,” commonly serves in natural la...
n translating from Chinese to English, tense and other temporal information must be inferred from o...
Linguistic studies on the aspectual system of natural language have mainly focused on its semantics ...
This paper reports on a pilot study of aspect marker generation in an English-to-Chinese translation...
Motivated by a systematic representation of the Chinese aspect forms that explores their intrinsic...
Languages differ in how systematically and obligatorily they encode conceptual categories such as te...