The Chinese aspectual system : theory and computation
著者
書誌事項
The Chinese aspectual system : theory and computation
(Corpora and intercultural studies / series editors, Kaibao Hu, Hongwei Ding, v. 8)
Springer, c2021
大学図書館所蔵 全1件
  青森
  岩手
  宮城
  秋田
  山形
  福島
  茨城
  栃木
  群馬
  埼玉
  千葉
  東京
  神奈川
  新潟
  富山
  石川
  福井
  山梨
  長野
  岐阜
  静岡
  愛知
  三重
  滋賀
  京都
  大阪
  兵庫
  奈良
  和歌山
  鳥取
  島根
  岡山
  広島
  山口
  徳島
  香川
  愛媛
  高知
  福岡
  佐賀
  長崎
  熊本
  大分
  宮崎
  鹿児島
  沖縄
  韓国
  中国
  タイ
  イギリス
  ドイツ
  スイス
  フランス
  ベルギー
  オランダ
  スウェーデン
  ノルウェー
  アメリカ
注記
Includes bibliographical references
内容説明・目次
内容説明
This book presents a theoretical study on aspect in Chinese, including both situation and viewpoint aspects. Unlike previous studies, which have largely classified linguistic units into different situation types, this study defines a set of ontological event types that are conceptually universal and on the basis of which different languages employ various linguistic devices to describe such events. To do so, it focuses on a particular component of events, namely the viewpoint aspect. It includes and discusses a wealth of examples to show how such ontological events are realized in Chinese. In addition, the study discusses how Chinese modal verbs and adverbs affect the distribution of viewpoint aspects associated with certain situation types.
In turn, the book demonstrates how the proposed linguistic theory can be used in a computational context. Simply identifying events in terms of the verbs and their arguments is insufficient for real situations such as understanding the factivity and the logical/temporal relations between events. The proposed framework offers the possibility of analyzing events in Chinese text, yielding deep semantic information.
目次
Chapter 1. Introduction
1.1. What is Aspect 1.1.1. Definition of Aspect 1.1.2. Studies on Chinese Aspectual Markers 1.1.3. Studies on Aspectual Classification 1.1.4. Situation Aspect vs. Viewpoint Aspect 1.2. The Goal of the Study 1.3. Methodology1.4. Thesis Organization
Chapter 2. Previous Studies2.1. Situation Aspect and Vendler's Classes 2.2. Aspectual Classification 2.2.1. Feature-Based Methodology 2.2.2. The Conceptual Structure 2.2.3. The Generative Lexicon 2.2.4. MARVS 2.3. Diagnostics for aspectual classification 2.4. Difficulties in Aspectual Classification 2.4.1. Degree Achievements 2.4.2. More than Degree Achievements 2.4.3. Achievement vs. Accomplishment 2.4.4. The term 'telicity' 2.4.5. Intention and Perception 2.5. Aspectual Studies on Chinese 2.6. Summary
Chapter 3. Event Structure and Event Types3.1. Ontological Situation Types 3.1.1. Representation of Ontological Situation Types 3.1.2. Progressive is Stative 3.1.3. Primitives of Events 3.1.4. Theoretically Existing Situation Types 3.2. Linguistic Events 3.2.1. Viewpoint Aspect 3.2.2. Linguistic Event: Combination of Situation and Viewpoint Aspect 3.2.3. What expresses the ontological situations and what to classify? 3.3. Where Is Telicity From? 3.3.1. Intentionality 3.3.2. Result 3.3.3. Perception and Prediction 3.3.4. Context 3.3.5. Summary of Telicity 3.4. Linguistic Event Types 3.4.1. Static State: |----| 3.4.2. Dynamic State: |~~~| 3.4.3. Change of State: ==|== 3.4.4. Semelfactive: |~| 3.4.5. Accomplishment: |~~~|== 3.4.6. Instantaneous Accomplishment: |~|== 3.5. Constructions and Their Aspects 3.5.1 Resultative Verbal Complements (RVCs) 3.5.2. Resultative DE construction 3.5.3. Serial Verb Constructions (SVCs) 3.5.4. V+(ZHE/LE/GUO)+O+(LE) 3.5.5. BA construction 3.5.6. BEI construction 3.6. Summary
Chapter 4. Semantics of Aspectual Markers and Negators in Chinese4.1. Introduction 4.2. Aspectual Operators 4.3. LE 4.3.1. LE with static state 4.3.2. LE with dynamic state 4.3.3. LE with accomplishment 4.3.4. LE with achievement 4.3.5. The Two LEs: LE1 and LE2 4.3.6. LE is not a tense marker 4.3.7. Non-Aspectual LE 4.4. zhe0 'ZHE', zai4 'ZAI' and zheng4zai4 'ZAI' 4.4.1. The difference of zai4 'ZAI' and zheng4zai4 'ZAI' 4.4.2. The Difference of Static State with and without ZHE and their relation with Negators 4.4.3. The difference of ZHE and LE in existential sentences 4.5. guo4 'GUO' 4.5.1. Grammaticality and World Knowledge 4.5.2. Time Frame of GUO 4.5.3. The Truth Condition of GUO 4.6. Negations 4.6.1. bu4 4.6.2. mei2you3 4.7. Summary
Chapter 5. Formal Representation of Aspect5.1. Introduction 5.1.1. Second Order Logic 5.1.2. Predicates and Parameters 5.1.3. Class, Instance and Subclass 5.1.4. Attributes, Functionalities and Habits 5.1.5. Instances of Situations 5.1.6. Multi-modal Predicates in Natural Language 5.2. The Basic Predicates Related to Time 5.3. Representations for Ontological Situations 5.3.1. Representations for state and change of state 5.3.2. Representations for Complex Situations 5.4. Linguistic Event Types 5.4.1. Static State: --- 5.4.2. Delimitative State: |---| 5.4.3. Instant Dynamic State: ~~~ 5.4.4. Activity: |~~~| 5.4.5. Semelfactive: |~| 5.4.6. Change of State: --|--, --|~~, ~~|--, ~~|~~ 5.4.7. Accomplishment: |~~~|--, |~~~|~~ 5.4.8. Instantaneous Accomplishment: |~|--, |~|~~ 5.5. Chinese Aspectual Markers 5.5.1. le0 'LE' 5.5.2. zhe0 'ZHE' and zai4 'ZAI' 5.5.3. guo4 'GUO' 5.5.4. Negators 5.6. Summary
Chapter 6. Annotating a Chinese Corpus for Aspectual Study6.1. Introduction 6.2. Annotation Framework 6.2.1. Event Annotation 6.2.2. Illocutionary Acts 6.2.3. Modalities 6.2.4. Sentence Type Hierarchy 6.3. Some Constructions in Chinese 6.3.1. Serial Verb Constructions (SVCs) 6.3.2. Resultative Verbal Constructions (RVCs) 6.4. Annotating a Chinese Corpus 6.4.1. Data Selection 6.4.2. Data Annotation 6.4.3. Annotation Result 6.4.4. Agreement Test 6.5. Summary
Chapter 7. Automatic Aspectual Classification Chinese Sentences7.1. Introduction 7.2. Linguistic indicators for sentence type classification 7.2.1. Indicators for different event types 7.2.2. Indicators for modalities 7.2.3. Indicators for speech acts 7.3. Aspectual Classification 7.3.1. Grounding the Features 7.3.2. Feature Extraction 7.3.3. Classifiers 7.4. Experiments 7.4.1. Sentence Type Classification 7.4.2. Classification on Different Modalities 7.4.3. Classification on Different Speech Acts 7.4.4. Classification on Mid-Level Event Types 7.4.5. Classification on Different Accomplishments 7.4.6. Classification on Different Achievements 7.4.7. Experiments with predicated features 7.4.8. Discussions 7.5. Summary Chapter 8. Conclusion8.1. Summarization of the Thesis 8.2. Consequences of the Study 8.2.1. Ontology and Lexicon 8.2.2. Extended Generative Lexicon 8.2.3. Computational Semantics
References
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