The Particle Zhe in Northwestern Chinese: A New Type of Contact-Induced Grammatical Change【電子書籍】[ Xiaolei Fan ]
[ ショップ名 ] 楽天Kobo電子書籍ストア
[ 現在価格 ] 13369 円 (税込)
[ PRポイント ]
【電子書籍なら、スマホ・パソコンの無料アプリで今すぐ読める!】
[ 商品説明 ]
<p>This book presents an analysis of a particular grammatical phenomenon in Northwestern Chinese, a.k.a. Northwestern Chinese dialects, uncovering a new pattern of contact-induced changes, which can be termed “compromise innovation”. In the vast majority of Northwestern Chinese dialects, the imperfective marker <em>Zhe</em>, which behaves like a verb suffix in most Chinese dialects, exhibits a number of peculiar characteristics. The most prominent one is that it occurs in an unusual syntactic position where no verb suffix is expected to occur; i.e., it is placed after the object (“V+O+<em>Zhe</em>”) rather than immediately following the verb (“V+<em>Zhe</em>+O”). Given that the grammaticalization of <em>Zhe</em> in Classical Chinese from a verb to an imperfective marker took place while <em>Zhe</em> was being used in the “V+<em>Zhe</em>+O” structure, the “V+O+<em>Zhe</em>” construction in Northwestern Chinese is likely the result of a more recent change. Furthermore, in a group of Northwestern Chinese dialects, there are various grammatical types of “VP1+<em>Zhe</em>+VP2” constructions in which <em>Zhe</em> occurs at the end of VP1 to mark the syntactic dependency between VP1 and VP2. In this usage, <em>Zhe</em> is no longer an imperfective marker, but rather, similar to a converb marker. This phenomenon challenges the conventional view that Chinese is a typical verb-serializing language. The book argues that the grammatical peculiarity of <em>Zhe</em> in Northwestern Chinese is a result of syntactic change induced by the contact with the non-Han languages (i.e. non-Chinese) spoken in Northwest China, including Mongolic, Turkic and Tibetan languages. The “V+O+<em>Zhe</em>” configuration, as the most distinctive phenomenon in this change, reflects a compromise between the two types of languages in contact: in such a configuration, the canonical VO order of Chinese is maintained, and meanwhile, by moving the verb suffix to the clause-final position, it also complies with the verb-final trait of the non-Han languages. In addition, there are many differences between <em>Zhe</em> in Northwestern Chinese dialects and the corresponding grammatical forms in non-Han languages in Northwest China. This indicates that the innovative evolution of <em>Zhe</em> in Northwestern Chinese faces certain constraints, and it is found that these constraints essentially stem from the inherent grammatical properties of the imperfective <em>Zhe</em> and various predicative structures in Chinese. The usages of <em>Zhe</em> discussed in this book vividly demonstrate the fact that the contact-induced change is a consequence of processes by which the “external soil” of another language (i.e. source language) and the “internal genes” of the native language (i.e. recipient language) compete against one another. This study may present an interesting case illuminating the very nature of language as a self-organizing and adaptive system, and refresh the linguistic typology community’s perspective on grammatical changes induced by language contact.</p>画面が切り替わりますので、しばらくお待ち下さい。 ※ご購入は、楽天kobo商品ページからお願いします。※切り替わらない場合は、こちら をクリックして下さい。 ※このページからは注文できません。