Japanese/Korean Linguistics Ser.: Japanese/Korean Linguistics, Volume 9 by Charles J. Quinn Jr. (2001, Trade Paperback)

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Center for the Study of Language and Information, Stanford University, Stanford, CA. Paperback, 2000 1st edition, 407 pages including the Index. This copy is in near perfect condition with the only flaw to report being a touch of rub on the cover.

About this product

Product Identifiers

PublisherCsli Publications/Center for T.H.E. Study of Language & Information
ISBN-101575862646
ISBN-139781575862644
eBay Product ID (ePID)102889537

Product Key Features

Number of Pages416 Pages
LanguageEnglish
Publication NameJapanese/Korean Linguistics, Volume 9
Publication Year2001
SubjectKorean, Japanese, Linguistics / General
TypeLanguage Course
AuthorCharles J. Quinn Jr.
Subject AreaForeign Language Study, Language Arts & Disciplines
SeriesJapanese/Korean Linguistics Ser.
FormatTrade Paperback

Dimensions

Item Height0.1 in
Item Weight20.1 Oz
Item Length0.9 in
Item Width0.6 in

Additional Product Features

Edition Number73
Intended AudienceScholarly & Professional
LCCN90-002550
Dewey Edition21
Series Volume Number9
IllustratedYes
Volume NumberVol. 9
Dewey Decimal495.6
Table Of ContentPreface PART I: HISTORICAL LINGUISTICS Toward Common Japanese-Koguryoic: A Reexamination of Old Koguryo Onomastic Materials Christopher Beckwith Rendaku and Proto-Japanese Accent Classes J. Marshall Unger Forgotten Voices: Early Recordings of the Kawakami Troupe J. Paul Warnick PART II: PHONETICS, PHONOLOGY AND ACQUISITION Laryngeal Effects of Stop Consonants on Neighboring Vowels in /CV/ Sequences in Korean Hyunkee Ahn Acquiring Mora-timing: The Case of the Japanese Coda Nasal Katsura Aoyama The Role of the Prosodic Word in an Ordering Paradox of Korean Mi-Hui Cho & Shinsook Lee Deriving Optionality in Korean Glide Formation Young-Mee Yu Cho More Acoustic Traces of Deleted Vowels in Japanese Alice Faber & Timothy J. Vance Nasalization Before a Liquid in Yonbyon Dialect of Korean Hyunsook Kang & Seo-Hwa Hahn Vowel Devoicing and Syllable Structure in Japanese Mariko Kondo The Role of Syllable Weight and Position on Prominence in Korean Byung-Jin Lim The Lexical Nature of Rendaku in Japanese Kazutoshi Ohno PART III: PRAGMATICS, DISCOURSE ANALYSIS, AND SOCIOLINGUISTICS A New Approach to the Analysis of the Sentence Final Particles ne and yo : An Interface Between Prosody and Pragmatics Sanae Eda From Place to Space to Discourse: A Contrastive Linguistic Analysis of Japanese tokoru and Korean tey Kaoru Horie & Yuko Sassa A Discourse Analysis of the Realization of Object NP Forms in Korean Eon-Suk Ko Code-switching in Japanese/English: A Study of Japanese-American WWII Veterans Tomoko Kozasa PART IV: SEMANTICS A Cognitive Approach to Connective Particles -e and -ko : Conceptual Unity and Conceptual Separation in Korean Motion Verbs Jeong-Hwa Lee What does ssik in Korean Really Mean? David McKercher & Yookyung Kim Quantificational Elements and Polarity Licensing in Japanese Shravan Vasishth PART V: SYNTAX AND ACQUISITION Resultatives and Language Variations: Result Phrases and VV Compounds Nobuko Hasegawa More on Two Ways of Deriving Distributive Readings J.-R. Hayashishita The Role of the Coordinators in Interpreting ANY in Korean Youngjun Jang Korean WH -phrases Void of Operator Ae-ryung Kim Causativity and Two Types of Noncausative Psych-verbs in Korean Sang-geun Lee The Acquisition of Japanese Passives Utako Minai Ni/ni yotte Variation in Japanese Direct Passives: A Syntactic, Pragmatic, and Historical Account Kimi Miyagi Some Evidence for a Zero Light Verb in Japanese Yutaka Sato Scrambling of Adjuncts and Last Resort Koji Sugisaki Inalienable Possession Construction with do Takae Tsujioka Index
SynopsisResearch on Japanese and Korean linguistics has been quite sparse. Yet from the research available, many linguists agree that Japanese and Korean are typologically quite similar, so a linguistic phenomenon in one often has a counterpart in the other. This similarity has encouraged further study of one language in the hopes of extrapolating the findings to the other language. This volume contributes to the expansion of advanced linguistic studies in both Japanese and Korean by juxtaposing recent research performed on both languages. Through such methods as discourse analysis, contrastive linguistic analysis, and the cognitive approach, contributors discuss Japanese and Korean phonetic, syntactic, and semantic structural similarities. While some papers explore the historical roots of Japanese linguistics and its impact on present-day Japanese and Korean, others investigate the languages' vowel and consonant systems. The diversity of topics presented is apparent in contributors' discussion of the importance of syllable structure, difficulties in possession construction, acquisition of passive construction in Japanese, and the influence of sentence structure on the interpretation of Korean words. The selected works in this volume were presented at the Ninth Japanese/Korean Linguistics Conference held at The Ohio State University in 1999.
LC Classification NumberPL503
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