Fr. 76.00

Routledge Handbook of Asian Linguistics

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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The Routledge Handbook of Asian Linguistics provides a comprehensive overview of the ways in which Asian languages should be conceptualized as a whole, the distinct characteristics of each language group and the relationships and results of interactions between the languages and language families in Asia.


List of contents










List of figures
List of tables
List of contributors
Introduction
I. Typological and historical linguistics


    1. The evolution of syntax in Western Austronesian

    2. Tagalog linguistics: Historical development and theoretical trends

    3. Typologically rare properties of Miao languages

    4. Naish Languages and Dongba/Daba Oral Traditions

    5. Motion events in Modern Uyghur narrative discourse
    6. II. Syntactic structures

    7. Understanding word-order variations in Asian languages: at the syntax-processing interface

    8. Head derivational differences between Chinese and Japanese relative clauses and an L2 acquisition study

    9. Inside the DP world: structures, movements, and debates

    10. A road map to Vietnamese phrase structure

    11. Null anaphora in Vietnamese: pro and argument ellipsis
    12. III. Phonology and morphology

    13. Onset Weight and Drift in Austronesian Comparative Phonology

    14. Ideophones in Japanese and Korean

    15. Indonesian phonology and the evidence from loanword adaptation

    16. Tones of Asian languages: A comparative overview of tonology

    17. The Korean evidential and mood suffixes
    18. IV. Discourse and pragmatics

    19. An interactional linguistic approach to investigating the interplay between language and interaction in Korean and Japanese conversation

    20. The metapragmatic speech-style shift in Japanese: From the telling mode to the showing mode

    21. Linguistic Politeness in Korean Speech Level and Terms of Address

    22. How to say 'no' in Korean: Sociopragmatic and Pragmalinguistic analysis of Korean speech acts of refusal

    23. Meaning as use: The pragmatics of Vietnamese speech practice

    24. V. Psycholinguistics

    25. Effects of spoken and written language on cognition: evidence from Thai and other Asian languages

    26. Multifunctionality of Inferential Evidentiality and Its Cognitive Mechanism: The case of 'ai in Saaroa

    27. Cross-language perception of Mandarin lexical tones: Comparison of listeners from Burmese, Thai and Vietnamese backgrounds

    28. Clinical Linguistics and Research in Language Disorders in Thailand
    29. VI. Sociolinguistics

    30. Reclaiming Linguistic Patrimony: the case of Nusalaut, a Moluccan language in The Netherlands

    31. Vietnamese heritage language socialisation in Catholic communities

    32. Language Ideologies in Vietnam

    33. Critical pedagogy meets patriotic education in China: opportunities and possibilities
    34. VII. Corpus linguistics and NLP

    35. Corpus linguistics and the languages of Asia

    36. A parallel corpus study of referential forms in Japanese and Thai

    37. When Poetry and Applied Linguistics Meet: Toward Building a Mora-Based Visual Language of Classical Japanese Poetry

    38. A Computational Approach for Corpus-Based Analysis of Translators' Styles: A Case Study on Three Chinese Translations of The Old Man and the Sea

    39. The morphology of Indonesian: Data and quantitative modeling
    40. VIII. Applied linguistics

    41. The Past, Present, and Future of Second Language Acquisition of Japanese Research

    42. Academic Japanese: Challenges, Conundrums, and Myths for Learners and Teachers of Japanese as a Foreign Language

    43. Korean L2 learning and teaching: Practices and perspectives

    44. Language Attitudes, Country Stereotypes and L2 Motivation: A Focus on ASEAN Languages

    45. A functionalist and communicative approach to the translation of Alai into English under the construal mechanism: The case of The Song of King Gesar
    Index


    About the author










    Chris Shei lived in Taiwan until the age of 40 and went on to pursue an MPhil and a PhD at the Universities of Cambridge and Edinburgh, respectively. Shei's work with Swansea University started in 2003, consisting of teaching and research in applied linguistics and translation studies. He also edited and co-edited a number of Routledge Handbooks published since 2017 through to the present, including those on Chinese Translation, Chinese Discourse Analysis, Chinese Language Teaching, and Chinese Studies. In addition to the most recent Routledge Handbook of Asian Linguistics, a handbook on mind engineering and an online Routledge Encyclopedia of Chinese Studies are currently in preparation.
    Saihong Li isSenior Lecturer in Translation and Interpreting Studies at the University of Stirling. Dr. Li has been appointed as a Visiting/Honorary Professor at the University of Strathclyde and at Hainan Normal University. Dr Li also worked as a freelance interpreter and a pharmaceutical business consultant from 1999 to 2012 in China, Norway, Sweden, and Denmark. Dr. Li has produced a substantial body of research including monographs and refereed journal articles on themes including food culture translation, political discourse translation, and policymaking regarding multilingual education. Her research methods are drawn from the digital humanities and from related fields including corpus linguistics and digital humanities in experimental research. She has also conducted translation and interpreting research by using multimodal technology such as eye-tracking, skin response, heart rate, and face recognition.


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