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Monografia | ||
Descrizione | *Problems in comparative Chinese dialectology : the classification of Miin and Hakka / David Prager Branner Berlin ; New York : Mouton de Gruyter, 2000 1 online resource (xiii, 477 pages) : illustrations, 1 map |
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Note | Formato pdf/epub Accesso riservato secondo le condizioni contrattuali https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=560842 |
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ISBN | 9783110802849 | |
3110802848 | ||
9783110158311 | ||
9780838581360 | ||
3110158310 | ||
0838581366 | ||
Collana | Trends in linguistics. Studies and monographs , 123 | |
Primo Autore |
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Anno pubblicazione | 2000 | |
Nota di contenuto | 1. The ideas of Chinese dialect classification; 1.1. Introduction; 1.2. Dialect and the Chinese idea of dialect; 1.3. Goals and methods in classification and comparison; 1.4. The primacy of data and the cultivation of data; 1.5. Reconstruction; 1.6. Under-description and the need for correspondence sets; 1.7. Rigor in classification -- reinventing the wheel; 1.8. Bundling of features; 1.9. Beentzyh and meaningful elicitation; 1.10. To recapitulate; 2. Wann'an and the problem of this study; 2.1. Wann'an township; 2.2. The meaning of the names "Hakka" and "Miin.". 2.3. The settlement of Wann'an, its geography, and local trades2.4. Major sites; 2.5. Markets and roads; 2.6. The problem of this study: Norman's diagnostic rules; 2.7. Common Miin initial-types; 2.8. The "Shawwuu Hypothesis"; 3. Wann'an's affiliation and the cohesiveness of diagnostic features; 3.1. The Hakka test; 3.2. Comparative Wann'an tones; 3.3. The Miin test; 3.4. Is Norman's Hakka criterion an artifact of his sources?; 3.5. Evidence from rural Liancherng; 3.6. Hakka in general; 3.7. Conclusions and prospects for future research on Hakka; 4. The character of Wann'an dialects. 4.1. Other features of Miin4.2. The classification of Wann'an within Miin; 4.3. Subclassification within Coastal Miin; 4.4. Conclusion; 5. Wann'an evidence about Common Miin; 5.1. A fourth nasal initial correspondence; 5.2. Rogue nasalization and evidence of voiceless nasals; 5.3. The shaang tone glottal stop in Miin; 5.4. Addendum: chiuhsheng lengthening?; 6. Conclusion: The place of Miin in the greater history of Chinese; 6.1. Introduction; 6.2. The question of the history of spoken Chinese; 6.3. Chinese linguistic macro-history; 6.4. The tonal proto-system of Miin. 6.5. A digression on the relative date of tone splitting6.6. Miin as a relic of Chinese before massive palatalization; 6.7. Conclusion and hopes for the future; Appendix A: Introduction to the Kengyunn; Appendix B: The Kengyunn; Appendix C: Index to the Kengyunn; Notes; References; 1. Spelling conventions and special symbols; 2. Sources of dialect data; 3. Bibliography; Index of glosses; Index of subjects |