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Situation-bound utterances in Chinese
formulaic language guànyòngy� compounds situation-bound utterances (qíngjìng zhuānyòngy� )
2018/3/22
This article argues that, when analysing formulaic language use in Chinese, besides
the three main groups, proverbs (yànyǔ 谚语), idioms (chéngyǔ 成语), and
guànyòngyǔ 惯用语 compounds, we need to distingu...
The mediatisation of Chinese corporate communication: A linguistic approach
mediatisation corporate communication critical discourse analysis strategic discourse chinese managers
2018/3/22
The mediatisation of corporate communication transforms corporate negotiations
of public companies from representative democracy to deliberative democracy,
whereas the public seems to own individual...
A Comparative Study of the Effectiveness of Input-based Activities And Output-based Activities on the Acquisition of Chinese Language
Input-based Activities Output-based Activities
2014/10/27
This paper describes an experiment that compares the effectiveness of input-based activities and the effectiveness of meaning-focused output-based activities on L2 Chinese learners’ ability to compreh...
Illocutionary and Perlocutionary Acts in Chinese Judge's Attached Discourse
Illocutionary act perlocutionary act judge discourse litigant
2009/8/5
After 2002, courts in China have increasingly been introducing certain judicial reforms, one of them being the improvement of trial language. In these courts, the judges append their comments to the c...
A Method for Decomposing and Modeling Jitter in Expressive Speech in Chinese
A Method Decomposing Modeling Jitter Expressive Speech Chinese
2012/12/18
Jitter is considered as one of the most crucial factors to the aim of synthesizing natural motional speech. Unlike the traditional methods of measuring jitter in emotional speech, this paper propose t...
This paper, based on a phonetic experiment, depicts a contrastive study on the rhythmic pattern of Chinese learners of English as a foreign language (CL2) as compared with that of the native speakers ...
‘Pseudo-passives’ in Chinese refer to the sentences with non-agentive subjects.
Such sentences are also known as ‘受事主語句’ in the literature.