- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Notes on Contributors
- Foreword
- 1 Change, relatedness, and inertia in historical syntax
- 2 Linguistic theory and the historical creation of English reflexives
- 3 Spontaneous syntactic change
- 4 The return of the Subset Principle*
- 5 Many small catastrophes: gradualism in a microparametric perspective
- 6 Feature economy in the Linguistic Cycle
- 7 Sources of change in the German syntax of negation
- 8 The consolidation of verb‐second in Old High German: What role did subject pronouns play?
- 9 Syntactic change as <i>chain reaction</i>: the emergence of hyper‐raising in Brazilian Portuguese
- 10 On the emergence of <i>TER</i> as an existential verb in Brazilian Portuguese
- 11 Gradience and auxiliary selection in Old Catalan and Old Spanish
- 12 Verb‐to‐preposition reanalysis in Chinese*
- 13 Downward reanalysis and the rise of stative HAVE <i>got</i>
- 14 The Old Chinese determiner <i>zhe</i>
- 15 Grammaticalization of modals in Dutch: uncontingent change
- 16 Correlative clause features in Sanskrit and Hindi/Urdu*
- 17 Towards a Diachronic Theory of Genitive Assignment in Romance*
- 18 Expletive pro and misagreement in Late Middle English*
- 19 Morphosyntactic parameters and the internal classification of Benue‐Kwa (Niger‐Congo)*
- 20 On the Germanic properties of Old French
- 21 A parametric shift in the D‐system in Early Middle English: relativization, articles, adjectival inflection, and indeterminates*
- References
- Index
Verb‐to‐preposition reanalysis in Chinese *
Verb‐to‐preposition reanalysis in Chinese *
- Chapter:
- (p.194) 12 Verb‐to‐preposition reanalysis in Chinese*
- Source:
- Historical Syntax and Linguistic Theory
- Author(s):
Redouane Djamouri
Waltraud Paul
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
This chapter argues that in all periods of Chinese, prepositions are distinct from verbs. In contrast to Roberts and Roussou's (2003: 128‐9) claim, prepositions resulting from V‐to‐P reanalysis do not retain the relational status of VPs, given that the external argument position has been pruned (cf. Whitman 2000).
Keywords: verb‐to‐preposition reanalysis, grammaticalization, modern Mandarin, Shang inscriptions, pre‐archaic Chinese, argument vs adjunct PPs
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- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Notes on Contributors
- Foreword
- 1 Change, relatedness, and inertia in historical syntax
- 2 Linguistic theory and the historical creation of English reflexives
- 3 Spontaneous syntactic change
- 4 The return of the Subset Principle*
- 5 Many small catastrophes: gradualism in a microparametric perspective
- 6 Feature economy in the Linguistic Cycle
- 7 Sources of change in the German syntax of negation
- 8 The consolidation of verb‐second in Old High German: What role did subject pronouns play?
- 9 Syntactic change as <i>chain reaction</i>: the emergence of hyper‐raising in Brazilian Portuguese
- 10 On the emergence of <i>TER</i> as an existential verb in Brazilian Portuguese
- 11 Gradience and auxiliary selection in Old Catalan and Old Spanish
- 12 Verb‐to‐preposition reanalysis in Chinese*
- 13 Downward reanalysis and the rise of stative HAVE <i>got</i>
- 14 The Old Chinese determiner <i>zhe</i>
- 15 Grammaticalization of modals in Dutch: uncontingent change
- 16 Correlative clause features in Sanskrit and Hindi/Urdu*
- 17 Towards a Diachronic Theory of Genitive Assignment in Romance*
- 18 Expletive pro and misagreement in Late Middle English*
- 19 Morphosyntactic parameters and the internal classification of Benue‐Kwa (Niger‐Congo)*
- 20 On the Germanic properties of Old French
- 21 A parametric shift in the D‐system in Early Middle English: relativization, articles, adjectival inflection, and indeterminates*
- References
- Index