Studies
in Prosodic Grammar collects
the latest findings on the relations between prosody and grammar in Chinese.
Based on prosody, this series explores and studies the interaction between
prosody and grammar from various perspectives, so as to further explore the
internal rules of prosodic grammar and reveal the close relationship between
them.
The third volume of Studies in Prosodic Grammar (or the second issue in 2018) includes
7 articles, mainly discussing three aspects: first, the tone and foot; second, the
prosodic lexis, including the Chinese interrogative words and prosodic studies,
the nominal change in dialects; and the third aspect, the induction and
summarization of prosodic grammar.
Feng Shengli got
his Master’s degree in Classic Chinese from Chinese Department of Beijing
Normal University in 1982 and got his PhD degree in Linguistics from University
of Pennsylvania in 1995. He was successively an Assistant Professor and
Associate Professor of the Department of East Asian Studies at the University
of Kansas in 1994--2003, a Professor of the Department of East Asian Language
and Civilization and a Director of Chinese Department at Harvard University in
2003--2010. He has been a Changjiang Scholar of Beijing Language and Culture
University (BLCU) since 2005, and a Distinguished Professor and PhD Supervisor
of BLCU since 2007. Prof. Feng now serves as a Professor of the Chinese
University of Hong Kong and Subeditor of “Language and Linguistics”. He is
interested in prosodic grammar, stylistic grammar, exegetics, historical syntax
and prosodic stylistics. Prof. Feng wrote Prosodic
Syntax in Chinese, On Prosodic Poetry
Style in Chinese, Expressions of
Written Chinese and other monographs, and also published over 100 papers.