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Typological Change In Chinese Syntax Dan Xu

  • SKU: BELL-51446196
Typological Change In Chinese Syntax Dan Xu
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Typological Change In Chinese Syntax Dan Xu instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxford University Press, Incorporated
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.1 MB
Pages: 272
Author: Dan Xu
ISBN: 9780191516382, 0191516384
Language: English
Year: 2006

Product desciption

Typological Change In Chinese Syntax Dan Xu by Dan Xu 9780191516382, 0191516384 instant download after payment.

This new interpretation of the early history of Chinese argues that Old Chinese was typologically a 'mixed' language. It shows that, though its dominant word order was subject-verb-object, this coexisted with subject-object-verb. Professor Xu describes the typological changes that have taken place since the Han period and shows how Chinese evolved into a more analytic language, supporting her exposition with abundant examples from recently discovered texts. She focusses on syntactic. issues, but pays close attention to closely related changes in phonology and the writing system. -;This new interpretation of the early history of Chinese argues that Old Chinese was typologically a 'mixed' language. It shows that, though its dominant word order was subject-verb-object, this coexisted with subject-object-verb. Professor Xu demonstrates that Old Chinese was not the analytic language it has usually been assumed to be, and that it employed morphological and lexical devices as well as syntactic means. She describes the typological changes that have taken place since. the Han period and shows how Chinese evolved into a more analytic language, supporting her exposition with abundant examples. She draws where possible on archaeological findings in order to distinguish between versions of texts transmitted and sometimes modified through the hands of generations of. copyists. The author focusses on syntactic issues, including word order, verbs, causative structures, resultative compounds, and negation, but also pays close attention to what she demonstrates are closely related changes in phonology and the writing system. The book will interest scholars and graduate students of Chinese linguistics, philology, classical literature as well as general linguists interested in word-order typology and language universals. It may be also be used as a text for advanced courses in Classical Chinese and Chinese diachronic syntax. -

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