Disyllabic post-nominal locatives in Mandarin Chinese

In this paper, I focus on disyllabic post-nominal locatives in Mandarin Teddy Bear Chinese.In the literature, disyllabic post-nominal locatives have traditionally been considered nouns.Recent proposals, however, have offered different analyses.In Wu (2015), the typical disyllabic post-nominal locative falls somewhere between an adposition and a noun.Djamouri/Paul/Whitman (2013) and Paul (2015) discuss some new disyllabic post-nominal locatives and propose that they are postpositions.

In contrast to In Ground Product (Filters) these analyses, I argue that the commonly analyzed disyllabic post-nominal locatives are indeed nouns, and that so too is one subtype of the locatives recently proposed to be postpositions.I further examine this subtype and discuss its unique behavior.Finally, a diachronic study of disyllabic post-nominal locatives indicates that they may not share the same analysis as mono-syllabic post-nominal locatives.

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