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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The acquisition of adverbial placement in Chinese by native speakers of English.

January 1998 (has links)
by Ng, Shuk Han. / Thesis (M.Phil.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1998. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 162-168). / Abstract also in Chinese. / Chapter Chapter 1 --- Introduction / Chapter 1.1 --- An overview --- p.1 / Chapter 1.2 --- Previous research --- p.3 / Chapter 1.2.1 --- "White and Trahey (White 1991, White & Trahey 1993, Trahey 1996)" --- p.4 / Chapter 1.2.2 --- Research on acquisition of Chinese as a second language --- p.7 / Chapter 1.3 --- Adverbial placement in English and Chinese and the learnability problems --- p.9 / Chapter 1.4 --- IL Problems predicted --- p.13 / Chapter Chapter 2 --- A descriptive account of adverbial placement in English and Chinese / Chapter 2.1 --- Adverbial placement in English --- p.20 / Chapter 2.1.1 --- The placement of the manner and D/F adverbials --- p.20 / Chapter 2.1.2 --- Some exceptions to the general patterns --- p.23 / Chapter 2.2 --- Adverbial placement in Chinese --- p.24 / Chapter 2.2.1 --- The placement of the manner and D/F adverbials --- p.24 / Chapter 2.2.2 --- Further discussion of Chinese adverbial placement --- p.29 / Chapter 2.2.3 --- Definiteness effects in Chinese --- p.35 / Chapter Chapter 3 --- Theoretical accounts for adverbial placement / Chapter 3.1 --- The accounts for English adverbial placement --- p.42 / Chapter 3.1.1 --- The placement of English AdvP adverbials --- p.42 / Chapter 3.1.1.1 --- Pollock (1989) --- p.43 / Chapter 3.1.1.2 --- Bowers (1993) --- p.45 / Chapter 3.1.2 --- The placement of English NP and PP adverbials --- p.51 / Chapter 3.2 --- The accounts for Chinese adverbial placement --- p.53 / Chapter 3.2.1 --- The placement of Chinese manner adverbials --- p.53 / Chapter 3.2.2 --- The placement of Chinese D/F adverbials --- p.60 / Chapter 3.2.2.1 --- Ernst (1996) --- p.60 / Chapter 3.2.2.2 --- Huang (1992) --- p.62 / Chapter 3.2.2.3 --- Tang (1990) --- p.66 / Chapter 3.3. --- Conclusion --- p.69 / Chapter Chapter 4 --- The experiment and the results / Chapter 4.1 --- The subjects --- p.71 / Chapter 4.2 --- The experiment --- p.72 / Chapter 4.2.1 --- The production task --- p.72 / Chapter 4.2.2 --- The grammaticality judgment task --- p.73 / Chapter 4.3 --- The procedures --- p.81 / Chapter 4.4 --- Overall results --- p.82 / Chapter 4.4.1 --- The production task --- p.82 / Chapter 4.4.1.1 --- The scoring procedure --- p.83 / Chapter 4.4.1.2 --- The results --- p.86 / Chapter 4.4.2 --- The grammaticality judgment task --- p.90 / Chapter 4.4.2.1 --- The scoring procedure --- p.90 / Chapter 4.4.2.2 --- The results --- p.92 / Chapter 4.4.2.2.1 --- The placement of manner adverbials --- p.93 / Chapter 4.4.2.2.2 --- The placement of D/F adverbials --- p.95 / Chapter 4.4.2.2.3 --- The placement of other adverbials --- p.104 / Chapter 4.4.2.2.4 --- The co-occurrence of manner and D/F adverbials --- p.108 / Chapter 4.4.3 --- Individual learners' performance --- p.115 / Chapter 4.4.3.1 --- GP 1 learners --- p.115 / Chapter 4.4.3.2 --- GP 2 learners --- p.119 / Chapter 4.5 --- Possible shortcomings of the experiment --- p.121 / Chapter Chapter 5 --- Discussion and conclusion / Chapter 5 .1. --- The hypotheses --- p.123 / Chapter 5 .2. --- Some important issues --- p.125 / Chapter 5.2.1 --- Little evidence of transfer --- p.126 / Chapter 5.2.2 --- VMO --- p.128 / Chapter 5.2.3 --- MDFVO and DFMVO --- p.129 / Chapter 5.2.4 --- Overgeneralization --- p.129 / Chapter 5.2.5 --- Lack of awareness of different placement patterns for different adverbials by GP 1 --- p.131 / Chapter 5.2.6 --- Inconsistency in judgments --- p.133 / Chapter 5.2.7 --- Why was adverbial placement learnable? --- p.134 / Chapter 5.3 --- The developmental stages of acquiring Chinese adverbial placement --- p.137 / Chapter 5.3.1 --- The unlearning of postverbal manner adverbials --- p.137 / Chapter 5.3.2 --- Optionality of verb raising and adverbial adjunction pattern --- p.143 / Chapter 5.3.3 --- Adjunction order of manner and D/F adverbials --- p.150 / Chapter 5.3.4 --- Why is adverbial placement learnable? --- p.152 / Chapter 5.3.5 --- Competence and performance --- p.156 / Chapter 5.4 --- Conclusion --- p.157 / Chapter 5.4.1 --- The findings --- p.157 / Chapter 5.4.2 --- The questions for future research --- p.158 / Bibliography --- p.162 / Appendix A --- p.169 / Appendix B --- p.172
2

The form and function of general extenders in English interactive disscourse

Overstreet, Maryann E (Maryann Elizabeth) January 1995 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Hawaii at Manoa, 1995. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 314-330). / Microfiche. / ix, 330 leaves, bound 29 cm
3

L1 influence on the learning of English among high school students in Harbin: a case study of adverbialplacement

Hu, Yuxiu, Lucille., 胡玉秀. January 2006 (has links)
published_or_final_version / abstract / Linguistics / Master / Master of Arts
4

Time and tense in English

De Klerk, Vivian A January 1979 (has links)
It has not been my aim to provide conclusive evidence for or against anyone hypothesis regarding Time and Tense. I have simply attempted to collect together and collate much of what has been written on the topic of tense in English, in order to show what the current trends of thought are. In Chapter One I presented a brief survey of some of the more basic notions associated with time and tense, in order to provide a background for the more linguistic approach to follow. I therefore examined such issues as the difference between time and tense, the problem of the passage and directionality of time, of the present moment, time and space , tense as a universal, "and various features of tense systems. I sketched Bull's system of scalars, vectors and axes as representative of our English tense system. Chapter Two dealt with time and logic, but as I am a mere layman in matters logical, I refrained from discussing any individual logical system in depth, and rather discussed various problems which appear to confront the logician in formulating a tensed or tenseless logic. This chapter aimed at providing a better understanding of the linguistic issues to follow, for time and logic are intimately connected with language. Chapter Three was more linguistically oriented, and in it I attempted to provide a broad outline of the development of thoughts about tense before the Transformationalist period (pre 1960). Because of the vast scope involved, I had, perforce, to be brief at times. I gave attention to tense in classical grammatical studies, and summarized how it was seen from about 1500 to 1800. I gave more detailed treatment to the twentieth century, focussing specifically on grammarians like Jespersen (1933), Twaddell (1960), Ota (1963), Palmer (1965) and others - all, writers typical of the structuralist era. At the end of Chapter Three I provided an overall summary of ideas on the main tenses by the end of the structuralist period - ideas which were to change radically within the next few years. In Chapter Four I discussed the ideas of tense of some of the main transformationalist/generativists - Diver (1964), Crystal (1966), Huddlestone (1968), Gallagher (1970), McCawley (1971) and Seuren (1974), in an attempt to show how theories on tense were becoming increasingly abstract, and how most data indicated that it is highly probable that tense is an abstract higher predicate of the sentence in which it appears in surface structure, closely related to temporal adverbs. Chapter Five continued in the same vein. I tried to show, using syntactic tests, that tense is a higher predicate, and used arguments involving Conjunction Reduction (based on Kiparsky (1968)), VP Constituency, Sequence of Tense, Pronominalization, and Quantification. In Chapter Six I focussed more closely on tense-time adverbials, in order to show that they have the same syntactic properties as tense, are also probably deep superordinate predicates, and are closely related to tense. My suggestion was that either tense is derived from temporal adverbs or vice versa, as this would simplify the grammar. The derivation procedures at the end of the chapter (6.8) were largely based on Hausmann (1971). I made no detailed reference to extralinguistic matters which affect tenses, in this study - such factors as are diScussed by G. Lakoff (1971) (presuppositions and relative well-formedness) and by R. Lakoff (1975). Tense is not a matter of pure Structuralism, just as language is not - extralinguistic factors ought to be accounted for before any study can claim to be conclusive. For this reason I do not in any way claim to have made an exhaustive study of time and tense - I have simply attempted to summarize and coordinate thoughts on the subject, and to suggest tentatively that the most adequate grammar of English would probably derive tense from underlying temporal adverbs.
5

Determining possible differing adverbial placement between the linguistic structures of left- and right-handed writers

Ramsey, David Sanford 01 January 1998 (has links)
This thesis has attempted to determine if there are differences, concerning adverbial placement, between the sentences of left- and right-handed writers. To make this determination, I have statistically analyzed compositions of eight graduate students (four left-handed and four right-), and two left-handed published authors' (Lewis Carroll's and Mark Twains) private correspondence.

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