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    Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://nccur.lib.nccu.edu.tw/handle/140.119/138484


    Title: The prominence of Aspect in Czech and Chinese – A learner corpus-based study
    Authors: 林蒔慧
    Lin, Melissa Shih-Hui
    Contributors: 斯拉夫文系
    Date: 2021-08
    Issue Date: 2022-01-04 15:33:32 (UTC+8)
    Abstract: For the study of verbal categories, Bhat (1999) establishes a typology of languages based on the prominence that languages attach to tense, aspect, and mood. The criteria for prominence are determined by factors such as degree of grammaticalization, obligatoriness, systematicity and pervasiveness (Newman, 1954; Lehmann, 1985). These factors are interconnected, i.e. the category which is the most grammaticalized in a given language is the most obligatory and systematic and therefore the most prominent in that language.

    In this study, the author considers that Czech and Chinese are both aspect-prominent languages. However, the degree of interactions between tense-aspect in Czech and Chinese are different, and this difference is considered as one of the main tasks to adequately acquire Czech aspects for learners whose L1 is Chinese. This argument is discussed and explained based on the corpora from CzeSL-SGT and NCCU Learner Corpus of Slavic Languages (LCSL).
    Relation: The X. International Symposium on Czech as a Foreign Language, Institute of Czech Studies
    Data Type: conference
    Appears in Collections:[斯拉夫語文學系] 會議論文

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