Affiliation:
1. Nanjing University
2. The Ohio State University
3. City University of New York
Abstract
Abstract
In this article, we discuss some fundamental issues as well as several unresolved questions of degree-based
theories in contemporary linguistics from the perspective of East Asian languages, with a view to pointing out some directions for
future research. We first focus on several controversies surrounding the studies of comparative constructions in the literature,
i.e., phrasal comparison vs. clausal comparison, individual comparison vs. degree comparison, big DegP vs. small DegP, the points
of cross-linguistic variation, etc. We then expand the discussion to comparative constructions and other degree-related
constructions in Mandarin Chinese, Japanese, and Korean, and demonstrate how an East Asian perspective offers a novel insight into
those controversies and uncovers considerable in-depth commonality underlying a variety of degree-related constructions
cross-linguistically. We conclude by suggesting some directions for future within- and cross-linguistic research.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics