1 to 10 of 128,902 Results
Apr 10, 2025 - TROLLing
Zhang, Liulin, 2025, "Background Data for: What is a Chinese word? Lexical constructionalization in Chinese", https://doi.org/10.18710/HCA0AU, DataverseNO, V1
Word is commonly assumed to be the basic linguistic unit, but its definition has actually been controversial in Chinese. The Chinese language is documented in Chinese characters, with no spaces between words: for Chinese, the inherent and (relatively) stable unit is the Chinese c... |
Apr 10, 2025 -
Background Data for: What is a Chinese word? Lexical constructionalization in Chinese
Plain Text - 10.4 KB -
MD5: d4f4d568152fe04cae9df04aab30c39b
|
Apr 10, 2025 -
Background Data for: What is a Chinese word? Lexical constructionalization in Chinese
Comma Separated Values - 13.6 KB -
MD5: a28bdeb50b6f7d8e40c3ca833da2ece4
The correlation between the results from the native speakers' word segmentation test and the conventionality of the frequent two-character combinations in the Modern Mandarin sample. |
Apr 10, 2025 -
Background Data for: What is a Chinese word? Lexical constructionalization in Chinese
Comma Separated Values - 10.1 KB -
MD5: 3a2eff5c4cf6d297ed242496d56758a4
Results from the native speakers' word segmentation test. The percentage shows the agreement. |
Apr 10, 2025 -
Background Data for: What is a Chinese word? Lexical constructionalization in Chinese
Comma Separated Values - 71.9 KB -
MD5: dd0920171244f1f5dbf514b3fe099fda
The conventionality of frequent two-character combinations in Bianwen (700-900 AE, representative Middle Chinese). |
Apr 10, 2025 -
Background Data for: What is a Chinese word? Lexical constructionalization in Chinese
Comma Separated Values - 72.1 KB -
MD5: 53d16d325e139e707ce3ef8f3532440a
The conventionality of frequent two-character combinations in Nogeoldae and Bak Tongsa (about the 14th century). |
Apr 10, 2025 -
Background Data for: What is a Chinese word? Lexical constructionalization in Chinese
Comma Separated Values - 76.2 KB -
MD5: b4397e5a2f26e0f220ed6b30d1b77667
The conventionality of frequent two-character combinations in five novels written by Wang Shuo (representative Modern Mandarin). |
Apr 10, 2025 -
Background Data for: What is a Chinese word? Lexical constructionalization in Chinese
Comma Separated Values - 73.1 KB -
MD5: 2195a793631e3d068c8ba75380f332e2
The conventionality of frequent two-character combinations in four novels from Sanyan Erpai (around 1640 AE, representative Early Mandarin). |
Apr 10, 2025 -
Background Data for: What is a Chinese word? Lexical constructionalization in Chinese
Comma Separated Values - 71.6 KB -
MD5: a67b2aaacf55ea878265bb31d66a4f3a
The conventionality of frequent two-character combinations in Shishuoxinyu (about 400 AE). |
Apr 10, 2025 -
Background Data for: What is a Chinese word? Lexical constructionalization in Chinese
Comma Separated Values - 67.2 KB -
MD5: 4a0fb1663b07779872230588a8adfc4c
The conventionality of frequent two-character combinations in Zuozhuan (about the 4th century BCE, representative Old Chinese). |