4.2 Article

Alternation in the Mandarin disposal constructions: quantifying their evolutionary dynamics across twelve centuries

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Publisher

DE GRUYTER MOUTON
DOI: 10.1515/cllt-2023-0038

Keywords

disposal construction; the ba-construction; the jiang-construction; syntactic alternation; logistic regression modeling; Mandarin Chinese

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This study examines the diachronic change in the alternation between the ba and jiang constructions in Chinese. It finds that the usage of the ba-construction has increased over time, while the jiang-construction has decreased. The study also reveals that the preference for the jiang-construction in informal genres has reduced and disappeared in modern times. It further identifies both stable and fluid linguistic constraints that influence the choice between the two constructions.
Despite extensive research on the ba-construction in Chinese, the diachronic change in the alternation between the ba and jiang constructions has received little attention. The present study takes a multifactorial approach to examine the factors that probabilistically condition the alternation based on diachronic data across twelve centuries. The results suggest two general trends. First, the odds of the ba-construction have increased over time at the expense of the jiang-construction. Second, over time, the effect size of the significant preference for the jiang-construction in informal genres has reduced from the 10th to the 19th century, and this preference has disappeared in modern times; accordingly, both informal and formal genres have converged to favor the ba-construction in modern times. Regression modeling also shows that there are both stable linguistic constraints (parallelism/syntactic priming, verb type, NP2 animacy, and NP2 length) and fluid constraints (adjunct semantics, and genre). This study advances our knowledge of the two disposal constructions and their evolution, sheds light on the Principle of No Synonymy (Bolinger, Dwight. 1977. Meaning and form. New York: Longman; Goldberg, Adele E. 1995. Constructions: A construction grammar approach to argument structure. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press; Goldberg, Adele E. 2002. Surface generalizations: An alternative to alternations. Cognitive Linguistics 13(4). 327-356), and makes a methodological contribution to the empirical testing of hypotheses. It can also provide insight into grammatical alternations in Mandarin.

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