As a subject of universal appeal, spatial demonstratives have been studied extensively from a variety of disciplines. What marks the present study as distinct is that it is an English-Chinese comparative study set in a cognitive-linguistic framework and that the methodology features a parallel corpora-based, discourse analysis approach. The framework illuminates the nature of the demonstratives’ basic and extended meaning and use, the connections between them, and the mechanisms that govern and constrain their trends of extension. The corpora place the English and Chinese demonstratives in comparable discourse contexts and processes, providing an “ecological” environment for the observation of how their behavior fits into the respective structural and discourse systems of the two languages. The study also illuminates important issues such as the subjectivity of language, language as a representational system and a vehicle of communication, the interface between form and function, and the role of context in discourse comprehension.
Table of contents
Preface
ix
Introduction
xi
Acknowledgements
xiii
List of tables
xv
The figure
xvi
Conventions and abbreviations
xvii
1. Introduction
1
2. The nature of the spatial demonstratives
27
3. Spatial demonstratives in real space
59
4. Spatial demonstratives in displaced contexts: Similar trends of extension
77
5. Spatial demonstratives in displaced contexts: Strutural constraints on the similar trends of extension