A study of Japanese aspect : from its communicative functions
Abstract
When a person linguistically describes a situation where it
started raining, it is possible to describe it in Japanese with
at least three different sentences: ( 1) ame qa furi-hajime- ta.
( 2) ame qa furi- dashi- ta, and ( 3 ) ame qa fut-te ki-ta .
Morphologically the former two sentence involve compound verbs
such as furi-dasu and furi-hajimeru and the last sentence
involves a combination of te conjunction and kuru
aspectual auxiliary verb. The question which arises here,
however, is whether depending on the context the speaker
distinguishes these three sentences: whether these formally
different sentences indicate the speaker's different ways of
perceiving the situation.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description