Abstract
Abstract
The parts of speech system and lexical flexibility in Mandarin Chinese (henceforth Chinese) has long been subjects
of debate due to the pervasive zero coding of action reference constructions. In this article, we analyze properties of the
Chinese Action Reference Construction from the perspective of Radical Construction Grammar (Croft 2001, 2022), focusing on its structural coding, behavioral potential,
productivity, and semantic shifts. We also discuss typological features that potentially reinforce lexical flexibility in Chinese,
and the implications that the language-specific properties of Chinese present for cross-linguistic discussions of parts of speech.
Specifically, reference, instead of predication, is the most flexible information-packaging function in Chinese, challenging the
privileged status of predication established in previous studies on parts of speech and lexical flexibility.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company