Abstract

The present study aimed to investigate how native Japanese speakers learning Chinese choose preferred positions for temporal adverbs depending on their level of Chinese proficiency. A naturalness judgment task conducted on native Chinese speakers showed that the most natural position for Chinese temporal adverbs was before the subject and that placement after the locative prepositional phrase was incorrect. The same task applied to native Japanese speakers found the most natural position for Japanese temporal adverbs was also before the subject. Further, when they appear at the beginning of a sentence, they provide the time for the entire sentence. Accordingly, temporal topicalization appears to influence naturalness decisions by both native Chinese and Japanese speakers. A point of difference was that in Japanese, a temporal adverb placed after a locative prepositional phrase was judged to be acceptable. When the same task was given to native Japanese speakers learning Chinese divided into three Chinese proficiency level groups, placement before the subject was the most preferred by the higher Chinese proficiency group. In addition, placement after the locative prepositional phrase was unfavored by them while the same position was frequently selected by the lower level group. As Chinese proficiency increases it appears that the preferred temporal adverb position is before the subject and the placement after the locative prepositional is judged to be unnatural. Thus, a sense of suitable temporal adverb positions in Chinese is influenced by the level of Chinese proficiency of native Japanese speakers.

Highlights

  • Because a verb in a Chinese sentence does not give a clear indication of time, temporal adverbs1 play an important role in identifying when an event takes place

  • Experiment 1 indicated that the most natural position perceived by native Chinese speakers was the position before the subject

  • Against the claim of “a slight preference for time to come before place” by Chao (2011), p. 124, Experiment 1 indicated that native Chinese speakers rejected a temporal adverb placed after a locative prepositional phrase as a constituting a natural sentence

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Summary

Introduction

Because a verb in a Chinese sentence does not give a clear indication of time, temporal adverbs play an important role in identifying when an event takes place. Tense in Chinese is typically indicated by temporal adverbs such as zuótian “yesterday” for past tense, jıntian “today” for present tense, and míngtian “tomorrow” for future tense. The temporal adverb (Adv) is placed after the subject “I” and before the locative prepositional phrase (PP) “at the neighbor’s house”, resulting in the order of SAdv(time)PP(place)VO. These temporal adverbs may be placed before the subject in the order of Adv(time)S PP(place)VO. A temporal adverb occurring after a locative phrase seems to be less preferred (Chao, 2011)

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