In:Current Studies in Chinese Language and Discourse: Global context and diverse perspectives
Edited by Yun Xiao and Linda Tsung
[Studies in Chinese Language and Discourse 10] 2019
► pp. 27–56
Chapter 3Usage based language change and exemplar representations in Beijing Mandarin Chinese
Published online: 15 April 2019
https://doi.org/10.1075/scld.10.03tao
https://doi.org/10.1075/scld.10.03tao
Abstract
This study offers support to usage-based studies to promote the importance of everyday language use in language development and grammaticalization. Specifically, the study presents a new construction in Beijing Mandarin Chinese that currently co-occurs with its original form, both in spoken language and written texts. The change is another instance of phono-syntactic conspiracy (Tao 2002, 2006, 2009). It starts from phonological reduction and ends in a syntactic change of a highly frequently used rhetorical question 不是…吗: ‘Isn’t it the case that….’ However, the process differs from previous findings (Bybee 2010) in that the grammaticalization process involves usage frequency as well as cognitive, cultural and social factors. The findings further support the view that language and grammar are fostered and conditioned through human communication.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Mandarin Chinese and the current study
- 2.1Mandarin Chinese pertaining to the present study
- 2.2The current study
- 3.Phono-syntactic conspiracy and grammaticalization
- 4.Usage-caused grammatical change
- 4.1The data and the specific construction of this study
- 4.2Usage frequency, consonant lenition and an optional allophone
- 4.3Tone sandhi, the rhotic approximant and exemplar representations of /sh/
- 4.4Language variation, grammaticalization, and language change
- 4.4.1Misperception and transcription
- 4.4.2Impact of 普通话 Putonghua ‘common language’
- 4.5Interim summary
- 5.Conclusion
Acknowledgements Notes References Appendix
References (70)
Ashby, Michael, and John Maidment. 2005. Introducing Phonetic Science. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Barlow, Michael, and Suzanne Kemmer. 2000 (eds). Usage-Based Models of Language. Sanford, CSLI Publications.
Boyce, Suzanne E., Sarah M. Hamilton, and Ahmed Rivera-Campos. 2016. “Acquiring rhoticity across languages: An ultrasound study of differentiating tongue movements.” Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics 30 (3–5): 174–201.
Bybee, Joan. 2000. “The phonology of the lexicon: Evidence from lexical diffusion.” In Usage-Based Models of Language, ed. by Michael Barlow and Suzanne Kemmer, 65–85. Stanford: CSLI Publications.
. 2003. “Mechanisms of change in grammaticization: The role of frequency.” In The handbook of historical linguistics, ed. by Brian D. Joseph and Richard D. Janda, 602–23. Oxford: Blackwell.
. 2013. “Usage-based Theory and Exemplar Representations of Constructions.” In The Oxford Handbook of Construction Grammar, ed. by Thomas Hoffmann and Graeme Trousdale, 49–69. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
Bybee, Joan and Paul Hopper. 2001. “Introduction to frequency and the emergence of linguistic structure.” In Frequency effects and the emergence of linguistic structure, ed. by Joan Bybee and Paul Hopper, 1–24. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Bybee, Joan, William Pagliuca, and Revere D. Perkins. 1991. “Back to the future.” In Approaches to grammaticalization, ed. by Elizabeth C. Traugott, and Bernd Heine, 19–58. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Bybee, Joan, Revere D. Perkins, and William Pagliuca. 1994. The evolution of grammar: Tense, aspect, and modality in the languages of the world. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Bybee, Joan, and Joanne Scheibman. 1999. “The effect of usage on degrees of constituency: The reduction of don’t in English.” Linguistics 37: 575–596.
Cambridge Dictionary. Accessed December 28, 2017. [URL].
Chafe, Wallace. 1994. Discourse, Consciousness and Time: The Flow and Displacement of Conscious Experience in Speaking and Writing. Chicago: University of Chicago of Press.
. 2002. “Putting Grammaticalization in its place.” In New Reflections of Grammaticalization, ed. by Ilse Wischer, and Gabriele Dieward, 395–412. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Chen, Ping. 1999. Modern Chinese: History and Sociolinguistics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Erbaugh, Mary S., 1986. “The development of Chinese noun classifiers historically and in young children.” In Noun Classes and Categorization, ed. by Colette G. Craig, 399–436. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Fowler, Carol. 1986. “An event approach to the study of speech perception from a direct‐realist perspective.” Journal of Phonetics 14: 3–28.
Goldinger, Stephen D. 1998. “Echoes of echoes? An episodic theory of lexical access.” Psychological Review 105: 251–279.
2013. “The cognitive basis of spontaneous imitation: Evidence from the visual world.” Proceedings of Meetings on Acoustics 19: 1–6.
Goodwin, Charles. 2013. “The co-operative, transformative organization of human action and knowledge.” Journal of Pragmatics 46 (1): 8–23.
Goodwin, Charles and Marjorie H. Goodwin. 2004 “Participation.” In A Companion to Linguistic Anthropology, ed. by Alessandro Duranti, 222–244. Malden, MA: Blackwell.
Guo, Degang 郭德纲 and Qian Yu 于谦. 卖吊票 (Mai Diao Piao: Selling Tickets for Hanging Seats. Cross-Talk) [URL] Accessed February 5, 2017.
Haiman, John. 1994. “Ritualization and the development of language.” In Perspectives on Grammaticalization, ed. by William Pagliuca. 3–28. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Heine, Bernd. 1993. Auxiliaries: Cognitive forces and grammaticalization. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
. 2002. “On the role of context in grammaticalization.” In New Reflections of Grammaticalization, ed. by Ilse Wischer, and Gabriele Dieward, 83–101. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Heine, Bernd and Tanya Kuteva. 2002. World Lexicon of Grammaticalization. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Hopper, Paul J. 1994. “Phonogenesis.” In Perspectives on Grammaticalization, ed. by William Pagliuca, 29–45. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Hopper, Paul. J. 1998. “The paradigm at the end of the universe.” In The Limits of Grammaticalization, ed. by Anna G. Ramat, and Paul Hopper, 147–158. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
1999. “Conversation and argument structure: The significance of dialogue for grammatical explanation.” Paper presented at the International Symposium New Reflections on Grammaticalization. University of Potsdam, Germany.
Hopper, Paul J. and Elizabeth Closs Traugott. 2003 (1993). Grammaticalization. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Ingram, David. 1989. First Language Acquisition: Method, description and explanation. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Ladefoged, Peter. 1964. A Phonetic Study of West African Languages. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Jefferson, Gail. 2004. “Glossary of transcript symbols with an Introduction.” In Conversation Analysis: Studies from the first generation, ed. by Gene H. Lerner, 13–23. Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
Ladefoged, Peter. 2003. Phonetic Data Analysis: An introduction to fieldwork and instrumental techniques. Malden, MA and Oxford: Blackwell.
Langacker, Ronald. 1987. Foundations of Cognitive Grammar: Theoretical prerequisites. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
Lass, Roger. 1984. Phonology: An introduction to basic concepts. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Law of the People’s Republic of China on the Standard Spoken and Written Chinese Language. People’s Republic of China Database of Laws and Regulations. Published October 31, 2000. Accessed January 31, 2017. [URL].
Li, Charles and Sandra A. Thompson. 1981. Mandarin Chinese: A functional reference grammar. Berkeley: University of California Press.
. 2011. “Loanword adaptation in Standard Mandarin and phonological theory,” Current Issues in Chinese Linguistics, edited by Yun Xiao, Liang Tao & Hooi Ling Soh, 426–451. Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
Lindqvist, Cecilia. 1991. China: Empire of Living Symbols. New York: Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Inc.
Lü, Shuxiang 吕叔湘. 1990. 吕叔湘文集(2): 汉语语法论文集 (Lü Shuxiang Wen Ji (2): Hanyu Yufa Lunwen Ji: Collection of Research Articles by Lü Shuxiang (2): Articles on Chinese Grammar). 北京, 商务印书馆 (Beijing: Commercial Press).
Lyovin, Anatole V., Brett Kessler, and William R. Leben. 2017. An Introduction to the Languages of the World (2nd edition). Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
Norman, Jerry. 1988. Chinese (Cambridge Linguistic Surveys). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Pierrehumbert, Janet B. 2001. “Exemplar dynamics: Word frequency, lenition and contrast.” In Frequency effects and the emergence of linguistic structure, ed. by Joan Bybee and Paul Hopper, 137–158. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Reetz, Henning and Allard Jongman. 2011. Phonetics: Transcription, Production, Acoustics, and Perception. Wiley-Blackwell.
Su, Danjie. 2016. “Grammar emerges through reuse and modification of prior utterances.” Discourse Studies 18 (3): 330–353.
Tannen, Deborah. 1987. “Repetition in conversation as spontaneous formulaicity.” Text 7 (3): 215–243.
Tao, Hongyin. 2015. “Profiling the Mandarin Spoken Vocabulary Based on Corpora.” In The Oxford handbook of Chinese linguistics, ed. by William S-Y. Wang, and Chaofen Sun, 336–347. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Tao, Liang. 2002. “Phono-syntactic conspiracy and beyond: Grammaticalization in spoken Beijing Mandarin.” In New Reflections of Grammaticalization, ed. by Ilse Wischer, and Gabriele Dieward, 283–299. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
. 2005. “The Importance of Discourse Analysis for Linguistic Theory: A Mandarin Chinese Illustration.” In Linguistic Diversity and Language Theories, ed. by Zygmunt Frajzyngier, Adam Hodges, and David Rood, 285–317. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
. 2006. “Classifier Loss and Frozen Tone in Spoken Beijing Mandarin: The yi+ge phono-syntactic Conspiracy.” Linguistics 44: 91–133.
. 2009. “Syntactic tone and discourse processing in Beijing Mandarin: A case study.” Journal of Chinese Linguistics 37 (2): 258–296.
. 2018. “Self-repair in Mandarin Chinese: The multimodality of conversation.” In Multimodality in Chinese Interaction, ed. by Xiaoting Li and Tsuyoshi Ono, 255–298. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton.
Tao, Liang, Barbara Fox, and Jule Gomez de Garcia. 1999. “Tone-choice repair in Conversational Mandarin Chinese”. In Cognition and Function in Language, ed. by Barbara Fox, Dan Jurafsky, and Laura Michaelis, 268–281. Stanford: CSLI Publications.
Thompson, Sandra A., and Paul Hopper. 2001. “Transitivity, clause structure, and argument structure: Evidence from conversation.” In Frequency and the Emergence of Linguistic Structure, ed. by Joan Bybee, and Paul J. Hopper, 27–60. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Wang, Li. 1958. Hayu Shigao (A Draft History of the Chinese Language), Vol. 2. Beijing: Science Press.
Wiedenhof, Jereon. 1995. Meaning and Syntax in Spoken Mandarin. Leiden, the Netherlands: Research School CNWS.
Wieger, Léon S. J. 1965 (1927). Chinese Character, their Origin, Etymology, History, Classification and Signification: A Thorough Study from Chinese Documents. 2nd ed., English and revision according to the 4th French ed. New York: Paragon Book Reprint Corp.
Xinhua News Agency. 2011. Today in History: On February 6th, the Chinese State Department issued the document ‘Directions on promoting Putonghua’. Central People’s Government of the People’s Republic of China. Accessed on December 12, 2016. [URL]
Zhan, Weidong, Rui Guo, and Yirong Chen. 2003. 北京大学汉语语言学研究中心语料库 The CCL Corpus of Chinese Texts: 700 million Chinese Characters, the 11th Century B.C. – present, Available online at the website of Center for Chinese Linguistics (CCL) of Peking University. [URL]
Zhang, Qing. 2005. “A Chinese yuppie in Beijing: Phonological variation and the construction of a new professional identity.” Language in Society 34 (3): 431–466.
Zhang, Wei 张巍. 陆贞传奇 (Legend of Lu, Zhen). Accessed March 8, 2017. [URL]
Cited by (1)
Cited by one other publication
Tao, Liang
2020. Usage, media, and grammaticalization. Chinese Language and Discourse. An International and Interdisciplinary Journal 11:1 ► pp. 55 ff.
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 1 december 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
