Focus Manifestation in Mandarin Chinese and Cantonese

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A01=Peppina Po-lun Lee
Additive Particles
additive restrictive particles
Adverbial Quantifiers
Author_Peppina Po-lun Lee
Cantonese grammar
Category=CB
Category=CFG
Category=CFK
Chinese linguistics
comparative Chinese dialect syntax
eq_bestseller
eq_dictionaries-language-reference
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Existential Presupposition
Focus Adverbs
Focus Background Structure
Focus Manifestation
Focus Marking
Focus Particles
Grammatical Mechanisms
information structure analysis
morpho-syntactic configurations
morphosyntactic focus marking
Nuclear Scope
Phonological Prominence
Pitch Accent
Post-verbal Particles
Prosodic Stress
Restrictive Adverbs
Restrictive Particles
Scope Interpretation
sentence-final particles
Small Clause
Subject Np
Surface Word Order
SVO Language
syntax semantics interface
Syntax Semantics Mapping
tonal language grammar
Verbal Suffixes
Von Fintel

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138568112
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 21 May 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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One prominent function of natural language is to convey information. One peculiarity is that it does not do so randomly, but in a structured way, with information structuring formally recognized to be a component of grammar. Among all information structuring notions, focus is one primitive needed to account for all phenomena.

Focus Manifestation in Mandarin Chinese and Cantonese: A Comparative Perspective aims to examine from a semantic perspective how syntactic structures and focus adverbs in Mandarin Chinese and semantic particles in Cantonese conspire to encode focus structures and determine focus manifestation in Chinese. With both being tonal languages, Mandarin Chinese and Cantonese manifest different morpho-syntactic configurations to mark focus. A general principle governing focus marking in Mandarin Chinese and Cantonese is given in the book, which aims to give a better understanding of the underlying principles the two use to mark additive and restrictive meanings, and related focus interpretations. Particular attention is also drawn to the co-occurrence of multiple forms of restrictive and additive particles in Cantonese, including adverbs, verbal suffixes and sentence-final particles. Linearity has been shown to be an important parameter to determine how focus is structured in Cantonese.

This book is aimed at advanced graduate students, researchers, and scholars working on Chinese linguistics, syntax and semantics, and comparative dialectal grammar.

Peppina Po-lun Lee is Associate Professor in the Department of Linguistics and Translation at City University of Hong Kong. She has published more than 40 research papers in refereed journals and edited books. Her major publications have appeared in Lingua, Linguistics, Journal of Pragmatics, and Language and Linguistics, as well as ZhongguoYuwen (Studies of the Chinese Language) and Dangdai Yuyanxue (Contemporary Linguistics). Specializing in theoretical linguistics, her research interests cover semantics, syntax-semantics interface, and Chinese and Cantonese linguistics. She has worked on a variety of research topics, including focus and information structure, negation, eventuality, quantification, and particles.

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