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Title
The grammaticalization of Hakka, Mandarin and Southern Min: the interaction of negatives with modality, aspect, and interrogatives
Description
The primary topic of this dissertation is the grammaticalization of negation in three Sinitic language varieties: Hakka, Mandarin, and Southern Min. I discuss negative morphemes that are used under different modality or aspect contexts, including ability, volition, necessity, and perfectivity. Not only does this study examine Southern Min affirmative and negative pairs, but it also highlights the grammaticalization of negation and parametric differences in negation among the languages under investigation. This dissertation also covers the reanalysis of negatives into interrogatives. I approach the investigation of Southern Min negation from both synchronic and diachronic perspectives. I analyze corpus data in addition to data collected from fieldwork for the contemporary linguistic data. For my diachronic research of Chinese negation, I use historical texts and etymological dictionaries. Diachronically, many of the negative morphemes originate from full-fledged verbs and undergo an analogous grammaticalization process that consists of multiple stages of reanalysis from V to T (aspect; modality), and then T to C (interrogative; discourse). I explain this reanalysis, which involves head-to-head movement, using generative frameworks that combine a modified cartographic approach and the Minimalist Economy Principles. Synchronic data show that Southern Min affirmative modals are characterized by a certain morphological doubling. These doublings consist of two near synonyms used in sequence, resulting from the loss of features in a verb and a second verb added as a renewal. In the negation paradigm, some negatives project a negative phrase, while the others serve a dual function, occupying a modal/aspect head as well as a negative head. The latter system is gradually shifting to the former. This study uncovers evidence to counter the long-established paradigm, where negation is tied to its independent modality (abilitive, volitional and necessitive) or aspect (perfective and perfect). I observe a mismatch between the use of interrogatives and their modality/aspect and attribute this phenomenon to feature loss during their reanalysis from negatives to interrogatives. Results however show that consistency occurs in the grammaticalization of negation within Southern Min and intra-linguistically among the three Sinitic languages, and that parametric differences are found at the morphological level.
Date Created
2012
Contributors
- Yang, Huiling (Author)
- Gelderen, Elly van (Thesis advisor)
- Adams, Karen (Committee member)
- Gillon, Carrie (Committee member)
- Sun, Chaofen (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Topical Subject
- Linguistics
- Grammaticalization
- interrogatives
- negation
- Sinitic languages
- Syntax
- Hakka dialects--Grammaticalization.
- Hakka dialects
- Hakka dialects--Negatives.
- Hakka dialects
- Mandarin dialects--Grammaticalization.
- Mandarin dialects
- Mandarin dialects--Negatives.
- Mandarin dialects
- Southern Min dialects--Grammaticalization.
- Southern Min dialects
- Southern Min dialects--Negatives.
- Southern Min dialects
Resource Type
Extent
xv, 393 p. : ill
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.14762
Statement of Responsibility
by Hui-Ling Yang
Description Source
Retrieved on April 3, 2013
Level of coding
full
Note
thesis
Partial requirement for: Ph.D., Arizona State University, 2012
bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (p. 379-393)
Field of study: English
System Created
- 2012-08-24 06:21:42
System Modified
- 2021-08-30 01:47:25
- 3 years 2 months ago
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