Past Events
‘Perfective paradox’: A Cross-linguistic Study of the Aspectual Functions of –guo in Mandarin Chinese
2019.10.16 Prof. David C. S. Li
Head of Department
Department of Chinese and Bilingual Studies
The Hong Kong Polytechnic University
‘Perfective paradox’: A Cross-linguistic Study of the Aspectual Functions of –guo in Mandarin Chinese
The toneless aspect mark -guo is generally viewed as a perfective marker with experiential function. It appears to be subject to a number of semantic constraints, such as discontinuity, repeatability or recurrence, reversibility, and indefinite reference. This article demonstrates that ‘experiential’ is only one of the three main local functions of -guo. Crucial to the determination of the local function of a -guo clause is the boundedness of the verb constellation: ‘experiential’ (atelic situation, typically Activity verbs), ‘deresultative’ (telic situation, typically Accomplishment and Achievement verbs), and ‘ex-habitual’ (stative verbs). We will first elucidate these three local functions and clarify various semantic constraints of -guo before examining a small corpus of 300 -guo sentences to ascertain the distribution of its local functions in authentic texts. Then we will analyze how these functions are manifested in other languages. The evidence suggests that -guo is untypical as a perfective marker; rather, cross-linguistically the lexico- grammatical exponents of the experiential, deresultative, and ex-habitual functions suggest that -guo behaves more like a perfective marker, hence the ‘perfective paradox’. This seminar is intended to be a contribution to general and contrastive aspectology.