Intensification and Modal Necessity in Mandarin Chinese

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A01=Jiun-Shiung Wu
Archaic Chinese
Attributive Adjective
Author_Jiun-Shiung Wu
Category=CFG
CCP
Chinese linguistics
Clausal Complement
DC
Declarative Sentence
Default Readings
deontic modality
Deontic Necessity
Deontic Reading
Dynamic Semantics
English Adverbs
epistemic modality
Epistemic Necessity
Epistemic Reading
eq_bestseller
eq_dictionaries-language-reference
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
gradable expressions
Illocutionary Point
Intensification Reading
lexical semantics
Matrix Verb
Modal Adverbial
Modal Expression
modal intensification in Chinese
Modal Necessity
Rhetorical Relation
Salient Participant
semantic analysis
Semantic Behaviors
Semantic Underspecification

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138065192
  • Weight: 530g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Nov 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book addresses intensification and modal necessity in Mandarin Chinese.

Intensification is used in this book to describe the speaker’s emphasis on a proposition, because, by emphasizing on a proposition, the speaker intensifies the degree of his/her confidence and affirmativeness toward the truth of a proposition, cf. the distinction between ‘weaker’ and ‘stronger’. Modal necessity discussed in this book refers either to the speaker’s certainty regarding the truth of an inference, judgment or stipulation, that is, epistemic necessity or to the speaker’s certainty concerning the obligatoriness of a proposition, based on rules or regulations, i.e., deontic necessity. This book examines a series of lexical items in Mandarin Chinese that express either intensification or modal necessity, provides a unified semantics and also presents how these lexical items are semantically distinct.

Intensification and Modal Necessity in Mandarin Chinese is aimed at instructors, researchers and post-graduate students of Chinese Linguistics.

Jiun-Shiung Wu is a Professor of Linguistics and Director of the Institute of Linguistics at National Chung Cheng University, Chiayi, Taiwan. He received a Ph.D. degree in linguistics from University of Texas at Austin, Texas, U.S.A, May, 2003. He served as the President of Linguistic Society of Taiwan from February, 2010 to January, 2012. He is a board member of International Association of Chinese Linguistics. He is the author of Temporal and Atemporal Relations in Mandarin. Taiwan Journal of Linguistics Monograph Series No. 2. He also publishes more than a dozen of journal papers and has more than thirty conference presentations.

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