Functional Terms of Location in Chinese

Authors

  • Anthony C. Lister University of New Brunswick

Abstract

The usual locative pattern in Chinese is a preposition zài before the noun and a positional suffix after it. Names of countries and cities do not take the suffix. Marked place expressions normally precede the main verb but they can also be found in a post verbal position, a new tendency in Chinese. When a marked place expression modifies a noun a modifier de is added to the positional suffix and in all such cases in the corpus zài was also dropped. Zài is also dropped sometimes even when the phrase is not being used to modify a noun. In the examples examined this only occurred at the beginning of a sentence.

Published

1987-06-06

How to Cite

Lister, A. C. (1987). Functional Terms of Location in Chinese. Papers from the Annual Meetings of the Atlantic Provinces Linguistic Association (PAMAPLA) ACTES DES COLLOQUES ANNUELS DE L’ASSOCIATION DE LINGUISTIQUE DES PROVINCES ATLANTIQUES (ACAALPA)., 10, 120–129. Retrieved from https://conferences.lib.unb.ca/index.php/pamapla/article/view/442

Conference Proceedings Volume

Section

Papers / Présentations