Grammar of Chinese Characters

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A01=James Myers
Author_James Myers
Category=CFK
Character Phonetics
Character Phonology
Chinese character cognitive grammar research
cognitive processing
Competing Risks Regression
corpus analysis
corpus linguistics methods
Developmental Dyslexia
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experimental psycholinguistics
formal linguistics
Hapax Legomena
Horizontal Stroke
language systems
Lexical Grammar
Log Rt
Logographic Systems
Mandarin
Menzerath Altmann Law
Mixed Effect Logistic Regression Analysis
Mixed Effects Linear Regression
Mixed Effects Logistic Regression
morphological analysis
Morphological Family Size
morphology
orthographic linguistics
Phonetic Components
phonology
Prosodic Template
Real Chinese Characters
Regular Script
Sans Serif Typeface
Semantic Compounds
Semantic Radicals
Stroke Groups
Stroke Order
symbol structure learning
syntax
Vertical Stroke
Zipf Mandelbrot Law

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032092829
  • Weight: 460g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jun 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Anybody who reads or writes Chinese characters knows that they obey a grammar of sorts: though numerous, they are built out of a much smaller set of constituents, often interpretable in meaning or pronunciation, that are themselves built out of an even smaller set of strokes. This book goes far beyond these basic facts to show that Chinese characters truly have a productive and psychologically real lexical grammar of the same sort seen in spoken and signed languages, with non-trivial analogs of morphology (the combination of potentially interpretable constituents), phonology (formal regularities without implications for interpretation), and phonetics (articulatory and perceptual constraints). Evidence comes from a wide variety of sources, from quantitative corpus analyses to experiments on character reading, writing, and learning. The grammatical approach helps capture how character constituents combine as they do, how strokes systematically vary in different environments, how character form evolved from ancient times to the modern simplified system, and how readers and writers are able to process or learn even entirely novel characters. This book not only provides tools for exploring the full richness of Chinese orthography, but also offers new ways of thinking about the most fundamental question in linguistic theory: what is grammar?

James Myers is Professor of Linguistics at National Chung Cheng University, Taiwan. He has published numerous articles applying quantitative and experimental methods to grammatical issues in Chinese and other languages, and has also (co-)edited volumes on sign language, empirical grammatical research, and Chinese linguistics.

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