Outline of Classical Chinese Grammar

By Edwin G. Pulleyblank
Categories: Literature & Language Studies, Linguistics, Language & Translation Studies, Regional & Cultural Studies, Asian Studies
Publisher: UBC Press
Paperback : 9780774805414, 208 pages, January 1996
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774854603, 208 pages, November 2007
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780774859851, 208 pages, October 2010

Table of contents

Preface

Abbreviations

I. Introduction

II. Some Basic Principles of Classical Chinese Syntax

III. Noun Predication IV. Verbal Predicates

V. Compound Verbal Predicates

VI. Numerical Expressions

VII. Noun Phrases and Nominalization

VIII. Topicalization and Exposure

IX. Pronouns and Related Words

X. Adverbs

XI. Negation

XII. Aspect, Time, and Mood

XIII. Adnominal and Adverbial Words of Inclusion and Restriction

XIV. Imperative, Interrogative and Exclamatory Sentences

XV. Complex Sentences

Notes

Sources of Examples

Bibliography

Index of Chinese Vocabulary

Items

General Index

A classic in the field, this comprehensive analysis of classical Chinese includes a historical overview, principles of word order and sentence structure, and analyses of sentence types and complex sentences.

Description

Outline of Classical Chinese Grammar is a comprehensive introduction to the syntactical analysis of classical Chinese. Focusing on the language of the high classical period, which ranges from the time of Confucius to the unification of the empire by Qin in 221, the book pays particular attention to the Mencius, the Lúnyu, and, to a lesser extent, the Zuõzhuàn texts.

Outline of Classical Chinese Grammar starts with a brief historical overview and a discussion of the relation between the writing system and the phonology. This is followed by an outline of overall principles of word order and sentence structure. The next sections deal with the main sentence types – nominal predicates, verbal predicates, and numberical expressions, which constitute a special type of quasiverbal predication. The final sections cover such topics as subordinate constitutents of sentences, nondeclarative sentence types, and complex sentences.

Reviews

By any measure the most important book-length work on Classical Chinese grammar to have appeared in a Western language since Gabelentz's comprehensive grammar of more than a century ago ... a very sophisticated and scholarly treatment of Classical Chinese grammar, it is all the same entirely appropriate for even a beginning-level class.

- William G. Boltz

Finally there is a comprehensive grammar of Wenyan in English. Here in one volume one has handy the major grammar references needed to approach Classical Chinese texts. This useful book is the first comprehensive treatment of the grammar of the ancient form of Chinese used by the great philosophers like Confucius and Mencius.... useful to all students of Classical Chinese language and philosophy.

- Wordtrade