A corpus-based analysis of near-synonymous sentence-final particles in Mandarin Chinese: “Bale” and “eryi”

Xuefeng Gao, Sophia Yat-Mei Lee

Research output: Unpublished conference presentation (presented paper, abstract, poster)Conference presentation (not published in journal/proceeding/book)Academic researchpeer-review

Abstract

This paper explores the differences between two near-synonymous disyllabic sentence-final particles in Mandarin Chinese bale and eryi based on a corpus-based approach. We argue that there is a close interaction between adverbs and sentence-final particles. Firstly, the usage of adverbs in the local proposition of two different SFPs has a strong tendency. jin 'only'is only used in the local proposition of eryi, and jin-jin'only'tends to use in the local propositions of eryi. zui-duo ding-duo zhi-duo 'at most' are only used in the local propositions of bale, while jue-bu-shi jue-fei jue-fei jue-bu 'definitely not' are only used in the local propositions of eryi. Eryi expresses minimal value and bale expresses maximal value. Moreover, the position of the adverbs also presents a tendency: the adverbs in the local proposition of bale are always in the initial position, while eryi in the middle position. In addition, the polarity of the local propositions of two SFPs are also different: the local proposition of bale tends to express negativity, while the local proposition of eryi obtains a tone of neutrality. We believe that this study will significantly enhance the research on sentence-final particles and second language teaching.

Original languageEnglish
Pages222-230
Number of pages9
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2017
Event31st Pacific Asia Conference on Language, Information and Computation, PACLIC 2017 - Cebu City, Philippines
Duration: 16 Nov 201718 Nov 2017

Conference

Conference31st Pacific Asia Conference on Language, Information and Computation, PACLIC 2017
Country/TerritoryPhilippines
CityCebu City
Period16/11/1718/11/17

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Language and Linguistics
  • Computer Science (miscellaneous)

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