1st Edition

Modern Chinese Complex Sentences I Overview and Causal Type

By XING Fuyi Copyright 2023
    232 Pages 6 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    232 Pages 6 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book is the first of a four-volume set on modern Chinese complex sentences, and is focused on the overall characteristics and the casual complex sentences in the language in particular.

    Complex sentences in modern Chinese are unique in information and meaning. The author proposes a tripartite classification of Chinese complex sentences according to the semantic relationships between the clauses, that is, coordinated, causal, and adversative. The first part of this volume defines Chinese complex sentences, introduces the properties, scope, and functions of complex sentence relationship markers, and makes detailed comparisons between the tripartite and dichotomous systems for the classification of complex sentences. The second part thoroughly investigates causal complex sentences in their eight typical forms.

    The book will be a useful reference for scholars and learners interested in Chinese grammar and language information processing.

    Part I: Overview  1. Complex sentences and classifications  2. Connectives in complex sentences 3. Tripartite classification of Chinese complex sentences  Part II: Complex sentences of the causal type and relevant forms  4. “yīnwèi p, suǒyǐ q” and the relevant forms  5. “yīn p, yīn q” in Dream of the Red Chamber  6. “rúguǒ p, jiù q” and relevant forms  7. “zhǐyǒu p, cái q” and relevant forms  8. “zhǐyào p, jiù q” and “rúguǒ p, jiù q”  9. “yàobùshì p, jiù q”  10. “p, yǐbiàn q” and relevant forms  11. "yǔqí p, bùrú q

    Biography

    XING Fuyi is a renowned Chinese linguist and a senior professor at Central China Normal University. He has been devoted to the studies of modern Chinese grammar and has initiated the clause-pivotal approach for modern Chinese grammar studies. His other major publications include Modern Chinese Grammar: A Clause-Pivot Approach and Three Hundred Qs & As about Chinese Grammar.