The Cartography of Chinese Syntax: The Cartography of Syntactic Structures, Volume 11
This edited volume provides new insights into the architecture of Chinese grammar from a comparative perspective, using principles of cartography. Cartography is a research program within syntactic theory that is guided by the view that syntactic structures contain grammatical and functional information that is ideal for semantic interpretation - by studying the syntactic structures of a particular language, syntacticians can better understand the semantic issues at play in that language. The chapters in this book map out the "topography" of a variety of constructions in Chinese, specifically information structure, wh-question formation, and peripheral functional elements. The syntactic structure of Chinese makes it an ideal language for this line of research, because functional elements are often spread throughout sentences rather than clumped together as is usually dictated by language-specific morphology. Mapping Chinese syntactic structures therefore offers a window into the origin of heavily "scrambled" constructions often observed in other languages. The book includes a preface that will discusses the goal of cartography and explains how the collection contributes towards our understanding of this approach to syntax. The subsequent seven original articles all contain original syntactic data that is invaluable for future research in cartography, and the collection as a whole paints a broader picture of how the alignment between syntax and semantics works in a principled way.
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The Cartography of Chinese Syntax: The Cartography of Syntactic Structures, Volume 11
This edited volume provides new insights into the architecture of Chinese grammar from a comparative perspective, using principles of cartography. Cartography is a research program within syntactic theory that is guided by the view that syntactic structures contain grammatical and functional information that is ideal for semantic interpretation - by studying the syntactic structures of a particular language, syntacticians can better understand the semantic issues at play in that language. The chapters in this book map out the "topography" of a variety of constructions in Chinese, specifically information structure, wh-question formation, and peripheral functional elements. The syntactic structure of Chinese makes it an ideal language for this line of research, because functional elements are often spread throughout sentences rather than clumped together as is usually dictated by language-specific morphology. Mapping Chinese syntactic structures therefore offers a window into the origin of heavily "scrambled" constructions often observed in other languages. The book includes a preface that will discusses the goal of cartography and explains how the collection contributes towards our understanding of this approach to syntax. The subsequent seven original articles all contain original syntactic data that is invaluable for future research in cartography, and the collection as a whole paints a broader picture of how the alignment between syntax and semantics works in a principled way.
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The Cartography of Chinese Syntax: The Cartography of Syntactic Structures, Volume 11

The Cartography of Chinese Syntax: The Cartography of Syntactic Structures, Volume 11

by Wei-Tien Dylan Tsai (Editor)
The Cartography of Chinese Syntax: The Cartography of Syntactic Structures, Volume 11

The Cartography of Chinese Syntax: The Cartography of Syntactic Structures, Volume 11

by Wei-Tien Dylan Tsai (Editor)

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Overview

This edited volume provides new insights into the architecture of Chinese grammar from a comparative perspective, using principles of cartography. Cartography is a research program within syntactic theory that is guided by the view that syntactic structures contain grammatical and functional information that is ideal for semantic interpretation - by studying the syntactic structures of a particular language, syntacticians can better understand the semantic issues at play in that language. The chapters in this book map out the "topography" of a variety of constructions in Chinese, specifically information structure, wh-question formation, and peripheral functional elements. The syntactic structure of Chinese makes it an ideal language for this line of research, because functional elements are often spread throughout sentences rather than clumped together as is usually dictated by language-specific morphology. Mapping Chinese syntactic structures therefore offers a window into the origin of heavily "scrambled" constructions often observed in other languages. The book includes a preface that will discusses the goal of cartography and explains how the collection contributes towards our understanding of this approach to syntax. The subsequent seven original articles all contain original syntactic data that is invaluable for future research in cartography, and the collection as a whole paints a broader picture of how the alignment between syntax and semantics works in a principled way.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780190210694
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 08/04/2015
Series: Oxford Studies in Comparative Syntax
Pages: 256
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.20(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Dylan Tsai is a Professor of Linguistics at the National Tsing Hua University of Taiwan.

Table of Contents

Preface

Chapter 1
A Tale of Two Peripheries: Evidence from Chinese Adverbials, Light Verbs, Applicatives and Object Fronting
Wei-Tien Dylan Tsai

Chapter 2
The even-construction and the Low Periphery in Mandarin Chinese
Linda Badan & Francesca Del Gobbo

Chapter 3
On the Fine Structure of the Left Periphery: The positions of Topic and Focus in Cantonese
Candice Chi-Hang Cheung

Chapter 4
Adjunct Wh-Words in Left Periphery
Sze-Wing Tang

Chapter 5
Locating Wh-Intervention Effects at CP
Barry Chung-Yu Yang

Chapter 6
The Left Peripheral Renjia and Layers of CP in Chinese
Chen-Sheng Luther Liu

Chapter 7
The Fine structure of Spatial PPs in Mandarin Chinese
Hsiao-Hung Iris Wu

Index
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