Grammar in Use Across Time and Space: Deconstructing the Japanese 'dative Subject' ConstructionThis monograph contains the first systematic investigation of the Japanese 'dative subject' construction across time and space. It demonstrates that, in order to capture what speakers/writers know about how to put an utterance or a clause together, it is necessary to pay attention to what they do in actual language use and in different discourse types. The work also shows the importance of diachronic perspectives to help us better understand the ways in which a particular grammatical structure is represented synchronically. By utilizing modern Japanese conversation, contemporary Japanese novels, and a pre-modern and modern Japanese literature corpus, the study highlights the role of 'dative subjects' at the semantic and discourse-pragmatic levels. Specifically, it demonstrates that what has been considered to be a most 'grammatical' aspect of Japanese actually turns out to be rather pragmatically oriented. |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
Adj/Nom adjectival/nominal predicates animacy canonically marked contemporary Japanese novels conversational data conversational portion core argument NPs current study dative subject construction dative-marked dekiru discourse data discourse type discourse-pragmatic English following examples frequently Futabatei Shimei ga-marked genbun Genji monogatari grammar Heian Period honorific Hopper human referents I-NIWA intonation units Iwasaki Japanese dative subject Japanese language Kabata Kageyama Kumashiro 2000 Kuno lexically expressed Linell linguistic locations m'-marked human m'-marked NP;s m'wa-marked marker metonymic modern Japanese discourse Murasaki Shikibu nai-forms narrative portion narrator naturally occurring conversation nihongo-ga niwa NOM COP non-first-person NP,-ga NP2-ga construction NP,s NP\s NP2 Predicate NPs i.e. overt core argument overt NPs overtly mentioned PERF person perspective pre-modern Japanese predicate types relative clauses Ryosuke second NP semantic sentence Shibatani 1999 solely marked speaker spoken discourse subjecthood subjective expressions Sugimoto third person usage utterance verb verbal predicates wakaru watashi watashi-niwa written data written Japanese written language zero-marked
