16.1044, Diss: Morphology: Chung: 'Mandarin Compound Verbs ...'

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LINGUIST List: Vol-16-1044. Tue Apr 05 2005. ISSN: 1068 - 4875.

Subject: 16.1044, Diss: Morphology: Chung: 'Mandarin Compound Verbs ...'

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1)
Date: 04-Apr-2005
From: Karen Chung < karchung at ntu.edu.tw >
Subject: Mandarin Compound Verbs

	
-------------------------Message 1 ----------------------------------
Date: Tue, 05 Apr 2005 11:16:45
From: Karen Chung < karchung at ntu.edu.tw >
Subject: Mandarin Compound Verbs


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Institution: Leiden University
Program: Department of Comparative Linguistics
Dissertation Status: Completed
Degree Date: 2004

Author: Karen Steffen Chung

Dissertation Title: Mandarin Compound Verbs

Dissertation URL:  http://ccms.ntu.edu.tw/~karchung/dissertation/dissertationpub.htm

Linguistic Field(s): Morphology

Subject Language(s): Chinese, Mandarin (CHN)


Dissertation Director(s):
Bernard Comrie
Frederik H .H. Kortlandt

Dissertation Abstract:

This is a study of the structure and properties  of compound verbs in Mandarin
Chinese. The Mandarin  lexicon has not been widely studied in the way that
Mandarin syntax has, perhaps because of a popular  notion that compounds are a
kind of 'black box', in which 'lexicalization' is explanation enough for the way
the components of compounds are put together. In fact, equivalents of many of
the same features that  typify Mandarin syntax, such as instrumental, aspectual,
and passive constructions, are to be found on the lexical level as well.

By excluding separable structures such as Verb-Object  phrases and resultative
and directional constructions, we are able to establish, first, that verbs, like
 nouns, are invariably right-headed, i.e. modifiers always precede what they
modify; and also that compound  verbs with relatively few exceptions are disyllabic.

We divide compound verbs into subordinate, coordinate, embedded, and other
miscellaneous compound verb types, based on the contextual part of speech of the
component morphemes and their relationship with each other.

Subordinate compound verbs are found to exhibit an extensive system of verbal
prefixation, contradicting the popular idea that there are few examples of
affixation in Mandarin. Different relative position in a coordinate compound
verb sometimes distinguishes different senses of the same morpheme. Included
among embedded compound verbs we find lexical aspectual, passive, and causative
structures. Aspectual matrix verbs in initial position are found to express
intentioned, purposeful action, in contrast to complements of resultative
constructions, which indicate a natural outcome of an action. Many of the
compound verb types in the 'other types' category, such as resultative compounds
and transitive VO compounds, mirror other structural types; a few are foreign
imports.

While most of the examples given in this study are established lexical items,
new analogical formations continue to be created.

In short, separability serves as a clear criterion of what is and is not a
compound verb in Mandarin. And in general, Mandarin compound verbs are found to
strictly follow rules very similar to those of Mandarin syntax, with word order
the most important guiding principle.





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