Ying Liu
Exhaustivity, Contrastivity, and the Semantics of Mandarin Cleft-related Structures (eBook, ePUB)
37,95 €
37,95 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar
19 °P sammeln
37,95 €
Als Download kaufen
37,95 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar
19 °P sammeln
Jetzt verschenken
Alle Infos zum eBook verschenken
37,95 €
inkl. MwSt.
Sofort per Download lieferbar
Alle Infos zum eBook verschenken
19 °P sammeln
Ying Liu
Exhaustivity, Contrastivity, and the Semantics of Mandarin Cleft-related Structures (eBook, ePUB)
- Format: ePub
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
Bitte loggen Sie sich zunächst in Ihr Kundenkonto ein oder registrieren Sie sich bei
bücher.de, um das eBook-Abo tolino select nutzen zu können.
Hier können Sie sich einloggen
Hier können Sie sich einloggen
Sie sind bereits eingeloggt. Klicken Sie auf 2. tolino select Abo, um fortzufahren.
Bitte loggen Sie sich zunächst in Ihr Kundenkonto ein oder registrieren Sie sich bei bücher.de, um das eBook-Abo tolino select nutzen zu können.
Exhaustivity, Contrastivity, and the Semantics of Mandarin Cleft-related Structures investigates the semantics of the cleft and cleft-related structures in Mandarin, which, over several decades, have presented analytical challenges for semantic theory.
- Geräte: eReader
- ohne Kopierschutz
- eBook Hilfe
- Größe: 1.68MB
Exhaustivity, Contrastivity, and the Semantics of Mandarin Cleft-related Structures investigates the semantics of the cleft and cleft-related structures in Mandarin, which, over several decades, have presented analytical challenges for semantic theory.
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 228
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Dezember 2022
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781000821161
- Artikelnr.: 66778844
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 228
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Dezember 2022
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781000821161
- Artikelnr.: 66778844
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Ying Liu is an associate research fellow at the Institute of Modern Languages and Linguistics, Fudan University. Her research interests include formal semantics, experimental semantics, and Chinese grammar.
1 Introduction
1.1 The data
1.2 The problem
1.3 Aim and methods
1.3.1 Aim
1.3.2 Empirical methods
1.3.3 Typological investigations
1.4 Major findings
1.5 The organization of the book
2 Theoretical background
2.1 Information Structure
2.2 Focus
2.2.1 What is focus?
2.2.2 Types of focus
2.2.3 Focus Marking
2.3 Multi-dimensionality and types of meaning
2.3.1 Assertion vs Presupposition
2.3.2 Implicatures
2.3.3 Features of entailment, presupposition, and implicature
2.4 Question Under Discussion
2.4.1 Question semantics and focus semantics
2.4.2 CQ congruence and DQ relevance
3 Clefts and the related structures
3.1 What is cleft construction?
3.2 Prototypical and non-prototypical clefts
3.2.1 Prototypical clefts
3.2.2 Non-prototypical clefts
3.3 Related structures
3.3.1 Pseudo-clefts
3.3.2 Definite specificational sentences
3.4 Shi...de and its related structures
3.4.1 Shi...de
3.4.2 Bare shi sentences
3.4.3 Bare de sentences
3.4.4 Pseudo-clefts and definite specificational sentences
3.4.5 Verum focus, propositional assertion, and sentence-initial shi
3.5 Interim discussion
4 The interpretation of clefts
4.1 Previous treatments of clefts' exhaustivity
4.1.1 The assertion account
4.1.2 The presupposition account
4.1.3 The conversational implicature account
4.1.4 Empirical evidence
4.2 Contrastivity and the interpretation of clefts
4.2.1 What is contrastivity?
4.2.2 Empirical evidence
4.2.3 Contrastivity and Chinese shi...(de) clefts
4.3 Experimental studies on the interpretation of Mandarin clefts
4.3.1 Experiment 1: Large-scale corpus and web-based experimental study
4.3.2 Experiments 2-4: the status of exhaustivity
4.4 General discussion
5. A unified analysis of shi-clefts
5.1 Unique identification and the semantics of bare shi
5.1.1 Unique identification
5.1.2 The derivation of the semantics of shi
5.1.3 The status of exhaustivity
5.2 Extending the current analysis to related structures
5.2.1 Empirical foundations of the uniform analysis
5.2.2 The analysis of the related structures
5.3 Interim discussion
6. The semantics of de
6.1 Previous analyses
6.1.1 What de cannot be
6.1.2 The aspect marker analyses
6.1.3 Evidentiality and emphatic effect analyses
6.2 Two types of de
6.3 Verum focus de and emphatic effects
6.3.1 De independently manifests emphatic effects
6.3.2 What are the emphatic effects?
6.3.3 Verum shi and de
6.4 Cleft focus de and perfectivity
6.4.1 Perfectivity
6.4.2 de, le, and guo
6.5 Interim discussion
7. Conclusion
References
Index
1.1 The data
1.2 The problem
1.3 Aim and methods
1.3.1 Aim
1.3.2 Empirical methods
1.3.3 Typological investigations
1.4 Major findings
1.5 The organization of the book
2 Theoretical background
2.1 Information Structure
2.2 Focus
2.2.1 What is focus?
2.2.2 Types of focus
2.2.3 Focus Marking
2.3 Multi-dimensionality and types of meaning
2.3.1 Assertion vs Presupposition
2.3.2 Implicatures
2.3.3 Features of entailment, presupposition, and implicature
2.4 Question Under Discussion
2.4.1 Question semantics and focus semantics
2.4.2 CQ congruence and DQ relevance
3 Clefts and the related structures
3.1 What is cleft construction?
3.2 Prototypical and non-prototypical clefts
3.2.1 Prototypical clefts
3.2.2 Non-prototypical clefts
3.3 Related structures
3.3.1 Pseudo-clefts
3.3.2 Definite specificational sentences
3.4 Shi...de and its related structures
3.4.1 Shi...de
3.4.2 Bare shi sentences
3.4.3 Bare de sentences
3.4.4 Pseudo-clefts and definite specificational sentences
3.4.5 Verum focus, propositional assertion, and sentence-initial shi
3.5 Interim discussion
4 The interpretation of clefts
4.1 Previous treatments of clefts' exhaustivity
4.1.1 The assertion account
4.1.2 The presupposition account
4.1.3 The conversational implicature account
4.1.4 Empirical evidence
4.2 Contrastivity and the interpretation of clefts
4.2.1 What is contrastivity?
4.2.2 Empirical evidence
4.2.3 Contrastivity and Chinese shi...(de) clefts
4.3 Experimental studies on the interpretation of Mandarin clefts
4.3.1 Experiment 1: Large-scale corpus and web-based experimental study
4.3.2 Experiments 2-4: the status of exhaustivity
4.4 General discussion
5. A unified analysis of shi-clefts
5.1 Unique identification and the semantics of bare shi
5.1.1 Unique identification
5.1.2 The derivation of the semantics of shi
5.1.3 The status of exhaustivity
5.2 Extending the current analysis to related structures
5.2.1 Empirical foundations of the uniform analysis
5.2.2 The analysis of the related structures
5.3 Interim discussion
6. The semantics of de
6.1 Previous analyses
6.1.1 What de cannot be
6.1.2 The aspect marker analyses
6.1.3 Evidentiality and emphatic effect analyses
6.2 Two types of de
6.3 Verum focus de and emphatic effects
6.3.1 De independently manifests emphatic effects
6.3.2 What are the emphatic effects?
6.3.3 Verum shi and de
6.4 Cleft focus de and perfectivity
6.4.1 Perfectivity
6.4.2 de, le, and guo
6.5 Interim discussion
7. Conclusion
References
Index
1 Introduction
1.1 The data
1.2 The problem
1.3 Aim and methods
1.3.1 Aim
1.3.2 Empirical methods
1.3.3 Typological investigations
1.4 Major findings
1.5 The organization of the book
2 Theoretical background
2.1 Information Structure
2.2 Focus
2.2.1 What is focus?
2.2.2 Types of focus
2.2.3 Focus Marking
2.3 Multi-dimensionality and types of meaning
2.3.1 Assertion vs Presupposition
2.3.2 Implicatures
2.3.3 Features of entailment, presupposition, and implicature
2.4 Question Under Discussion
2.4.1 Question semantics and focus semantics
2.4.2 CQ congruence and DQ relevance
3 Clefts and the related structures
3.1 What is cleft construction?
3.2 Prototypical and non-prototypical clefts
3.2.1 Prototypical clefts
3.2.2 Non-prototypical clefts
3.3 Related structures
3.3.1 Pseudo-clefts
3.3.2 Definite specificational sentences
3.4 Shi...de and its related structures
3.4.1 Shi...de
3.4.2 Bare shi sentences
3.4.3 Bare de sentences
3.4.4 Pseudo-clefts and definite specificational sentences
3.4.5 Verum focus, propositional assertion, and sentence-initial shi
3.5 Interim discussion
4 The interpretation of clefts
4.1 Previous treatments of clefts' exhaustivity
4.1.1 The assertion account
4.1.2 The presupposition account
4.1.3 The conversational implicature account
4.1.4 Empirical evidence
4.2 Contrastivity and the interpretation of clefts
4.2.1 What is contrastivity?
4.2.2 Empirical evidence
4.2.3 Contrastivity and Chinese shi...(de) clefts
4.3 Experimental studies on the interpretation of Mandarin clefts
4.3.1 Experiment 1: Large-scale corpus and web-based experimental study
4.3.2 Experiments 2-4: the status of exhaustivity
4.4 General discussion
5. A unified analysis of shi-clefts
5.1 Unique identification and the semantics of bare shi
5.1.1 Unique identification
5.1.2 The derivation of the semantics of shi
5.1.3 The status of exhaustivity
5.2 Extending the current analysis to related structures
5.2.1 Empirical foundations of the uniform analysis
5.2.2 The analysis of the related structures
5.3 Interim discussion
6. The semantics of de
6.1 Previous analyses
6.1.1 What de cannot be
6.1.2 The aspect marker analyses
6.1.3 Evidentiality and emphatic effect analyses
6.2 Two types of de
6.3 Verum focus de and emphatic effects
6.3.1 De independently manifests emphatic effects
6.3.2 What are the emphatic effects?
6.3.3 Verum shi and de
6.4 Cleft focus de and perfectivity
6.4.1 Perfectivity
6.4.2 de, le, and guo
6.5 Interim discussion
7. Conclusion
References
Index
1.1 The data
1.2 The problem
1.3 Aim and methods
1.3.1 Aim
1.3.2 Empirical methods
1.3.3 Typological investigations
1.4 Major findings
1.5 The organization of the book
2 Theoretical background
2.1 Information Structure
2.2 Focus
2.2.1 What is focus?
2.2.2 Types of focus
2.2.3 Focus Marking
2.3 Multi-dimensionality and types of meaning
2.3.1 Assertion vs Presupposition
2.3.2 Implicatures
2.3.3 Features of entailment, presupposition, and implicature
2.4 Question Under Discussion
2.4.1 Question semantics and focus semantics
2.4.2 CQ congruence and DQ relevance
3 Clefts and the related structures
3.1 What is cleft construction?
3.2 Prototypical and non-prototypical clefts
3.2.1 Prototypical clefts
3.2.2 Non-prototypical clefts
3.3 Related structures
3.3.1 Pseudo-clefts
3.3.2 Definite specificational sentences
3.4 Shi...de and its related structures
3.4.1 Shi...de
3.4.2 Bare shi sentences
3.4.3 Bare de sentences
3.4.4 Pseudo-clefts and definite specificational sentences
3.4.5 Verum focus, propositional assertion, and sentence-initial shi
3.5 Interim discussion
4 The interpretation of clefts
4.1 Previous treatments of clefts' exhaustivity
4.1.1 The assertion account
4.1.2 The presupposition account
4.1.3 The conversational implicature account
4.1.4 Empirical evidence
4.2 Contrastivity and the interpretation of clefts
4.2.1 What is contrastivity?
4.2.2 Empirical evidence
4.2.3 Contrastivity and Chinese shi...(de) clefts
4.3 Experimental studies on the interpretation of Mandarin clefts
4.3.1 Experiment 1: Large-scale corpus and web-based experimental study
4.3.2 Experiments 2-4: the status of exhaustivity
4.4 General discussion
5. A unified analysis of shi-clefts
5.1 Unique identification and the semantics of bare shi
5.1.1 Unique identification
5.1.2 The derivation of the semantics of shi
5.1.3 The status of exhaustivity
5.2 Extending the current analysis to related structures
5.2.1 Empirical foundations of the uniform analysis
5.2.2 The analysis of the related structures
5.3 Interim discussion
6. The semantics of de
6.1 Previous analyses
6.1.1 What de cannot be
6.1.2 The aspect marker analyses
6.1.3 Evidentiality and emphatic effect analyses
6.2 Two types of de
6.3 Verum focus de and emphatic effects
6.3.1 De independently manifests emphatic effects
6.3.2 What are the emphatic effects?
6.3.3 Verum shi and de
6.4 Cleft focus de and perfectivity
6.4.1 Perfectivity
6.4.2 de, le, and guo
6.5 Interim discussion
7. Conclusion
References
Index
1 Introduction
1.1 The data
1.2 The problem
1.3 Aim and methods
1.3.1 Aim
1.3.2 Empirical methods
1.3.3 Typological investigations
1.4 Major findings
1.5 The organization of the book
2 Theoretical background
2.1 Information Structure
2.2 Focus
2.2.1 What is focus?
2.2.2 Types of focus
2.2.3 Focus Marking
2.3 Multi-dimensionality and types of meaning
2.3.1 Assertion vs Presupposition
2.3.2 Implicatures
2.3.3 Features of entailment, presupposition, and implicature
2.4 Question Under Discussion
2.4.1 Question semantics and focus semantics
2.4.2 CQ congruence and DQ relevance
3 Clefts and the related structures
3.1 What is cleft construction?
3.2 Prototypical and non-prototypical clefts
3.2.1 Prototypical clefts
3.2.2 Non-prototypical clefts
3.3 Related structures
3.3.1 Pseudo-clefts
3.3.2 Definite specificational sentences
3.4 Shi...de and its related structures
3.4.1 Shi...de
3.4.2 Bare shi sentences
3.4.3 Bare de sentences
3.4.4 Pseudo-clefts and definite specificational sentences
3.4.5 Verum focus, propositional assertion, and sentence-initial shi
3.5 Interim discussion
4 The interpretation of clefts
4.1 Previous treatments of clefts' exhaustivity
4.1.1 The assertion account
4.1.2 The presupposition account
4.1.3 The conversational implicature account
4.1.4 Empirical evidence
4.2 Contrastivity and the interpretation of clefts
4.2.1 What is contrastivity?
4.2.2 Empirical evidence
4.2.3 Contrastivity and Chinese shi...(de) clefts
4.3 Experimental studies on the interpretation of Mandarin clefts
4.3.1 Experiment 1: Large-scale corpus and web-based experimental study
4.3.2 Experiments 2-4: the status of exhaustivity
4.4 General discussion
5. A unified analysis of shi-clefts
5.1 Unique identification and the semantics of bare shi
5.1.1 Unique identification
5.1.2 The derivation of the semantics of shi
5.1.3 The status of exhaustivity
5.2 Extending the current analysis to related structures
5.2.1 Empirical foundations of the uniform analysis
5.2.2 The analysis of the related structures
5.3 Interim discussion
6. The semantics of de
6.1 Previous analyses
6.1.1 What de cannot be
6.1.2 The aspect marker analyses
6.1.3 Evidentiality and emphatic effect analyses
6.2 Two types of de
6.3 Verum focus de and emphatic effects
6.3.1 De independently manifests emphatic effects
6.3.2 What are the emphatic effects?
6.3.3 Verum shi and de
6.4 Cleft focus de and perfectivity
6.4.1 Perfectivity
6.4.2 de, le, and guo
6.5 Interim discussion
7. Conclusion
References
Index
1.1 The data
1.2 The problem
1.3 Aim and methods
1.3.1 Aim
1.3.2 Empirical methods
1.3.3 Typological investigations
1.4 Major findings
1.5 The organization of the book
2 Theoretical background
2.1 Information Structure
2.2 Focus
2.2.1 What is focus?
2.2.2 Types of focus
2.2.3 Focus Marking
2.3 Multi-dimensionality and types of meaning
2.3.1 Assertion vs Presupposition
2.3.2 Implicatures
2.3.3 Features of entailment, presupposition, and implicature
2.4 Question Under Discussion
2.4.1 Question semantics and focus semantics
2.4.2 CQ congruence and DQ relevance
3 Clefts and the related structures
3.1 What is cleft construction?
3.2 Prototypical and non-prototypical clefts
3.2.1 Prototypical clefts
3.2.2 Non-prototypical clefts
3.3 Related structures
3.3.1 Pseudo-clefts
3.3.2 Definite specificational sentences
3.4 Shi...de and its related structures
3.4.1 Shi...de
3.4.2 Bare shi sentences
3.4.3 Bare de sentences
3.4.4 Pseudo-clefts and definite specificational sentences
3.4.5 Verum focus, propositional assertion, and sentence-initial shi
3.5 Interim discussion
4 The interpretation of clefts
4.1 Previous treatments of clefts' exhaustivity
4.1.1 The assertion account
4.1.2 The presupposition account
4.1.3 The conversational implicature account
4.1.4 Empirical evidence
4.2 Contrastivity and the interpretation of clefts
4.2.1 What is contrastivity?
4.2.2 Empirical evidence
4.2.3 Contrastivity and Chinese shi...(de) clefts
4.3 Experimental studies on the interpretation of Mandarin clefts
4.3.1 Experiment 1: Large-scale corpus and web-based experimental study
4.3.2 Experiments 2-4: the status of exhaustivity
4.4 General discussion
5. A unified analysis of shi-clefts
5.1 Unique identification and the semantics of bare shi
5.1.1 Unique identification
5.1.2 The derivation of the semantics of shi
5.1.3 The status of exhaustivity
5.2 Extending the current analysis to related structures
5.2.1 Empirical foundations of the uniform analysis
5.2.2 The analysis of the related structures
5.3 Interim discussion
6. The semantics of de
6.1 Previous analyses
6.1.1 What de cannot be
6.1.2 The aspect marker analyses
6.1.3 Evidentiality and emphatic effect analyses
6.2 Two types of de
6.3 Verum focus de and emphatic effects
6.3.1 De independently manifests emphatic effects
6.3.2 What are the emphatic effects?
6.3.3 Verum shi and de
6.4 Cleft focus de and perfectivity
6.4.1 Perfectivity
6.4.2 de, le, and guo
6.5 Interim discussion
7. Conclusion
References
Index
1 Introduction
1.1 The data
1.2 The problem
1.3 Aim and methods
1.3.1 Aim
1.3.2 Empirical methods
1.3.3 Typological investigations
1.4 Major findings
1.5 The organization of the book
2 Theoretical background
2.1 Information Structure
2.2 Focus
2.2.1 What is focus?
2.2.2 Types of focus
2.2.3 Focus Marking
2.3 Multi-dimensionality and types of meaning
2.3.1 Assertion vs Presupposition
2.3.2 Implicatures
2.3.3 Features of entailment, presupposition, and implicature
2.4 Question Under Discussion
2.4.1 Question semantics and focus semantics
2.4.2 CQ congruence and DQ relevance
3 Clefts and the related structures
3.1 What is cleft construction?
3.2 Prototypical and non-prototypical clefts
3.2.1 Prototypical clefts
3.2.2 Non-prototypical clefts
3.3 Related structures
3.3.1 Pseudo-clefts
3.3.2 Definite specificational sentences
3.4 Shi...de and its related structures
3.4.1 Shi...de
3.4.2 Bare shi sentences
3.4.3 Bare de sentences
3.4.4 Pseudo-clefts and definite specificational sentences
3.4.5 Verum focus, propositional assertion, and sentence-initial shi
3.5 Interim discussion
4 The interpretation of clefts
4.1 Previous treatments of clefts' exhaustivity
4.1.1 The assertion account
4.1.2 The presupposition account
4.1.3 The conversational implicature account
4.1.4 Empirical evidence
4.2 Contrastivity and the interpretation of clefts
4.2.1 What is contrastivity?
4.2.2 Empirical evidence
4.2.3 Contrastivity and Chinese shi...(de) clefts
4.3 Experimental studies on the interpretation of Mandarin clefts
4.3.1 Experiment 1: Large-scale corpus and web-based experimental study
4.3.2 Experiments 2-4: the status of exhaustivity
4.4 General discussion
5. A unified analysis of shi-clefts
5.1 Unique identification and the semantics of bare shi
5.1.1 Unique identification
5.1.2 The derivation of the semantics of shi
5.1.3 The status of exhaustivity
5.2 Extending the current analysis to related structures
5.2.1 Empirical foundations of the uniform analysis
5.2.2 The analysis of the related structures
5.3 Interim discussion
6. The semantics of de
6.1 Previous analyses
6.1.1 What de cannot be
6.1.2 The aspect marker analyses
6.1.3 Evidentiality and emphatic effect analyses
6.2 Two types of de
6.3 Verum focus de and emphatic effects
6.3.1 De independently manifests emphatic effects
6.3.2 What are the emphatic effects?
6.3.3 Verum shi and de
6.4 Cleft focus de and perfectivity
6.4.1 Perfectivity
6.4.2 de, le, and guo
6.5 Interim discussion
7. Conclusion
References
Index
1.1 The data
1.2 The problem
1.3 Aim and methods
1.3.1 Aim
1.3.2 Empirical methods
1.3.3 Typological investigations
1.4 Major findings
1.5 The organization of the book
2 Theoretical background
2.1 Information Structure
2.2 Focus
2.2.1 What is focus?
2.2.2 Types of focus
2.2.3 Focus Marking
2.3 Multi-dimensionality and types of meaning
2.3.1 Assertion vs Presupposition
2.3.2 Implicatures
2.3.3 Features of entailment, presupposition, and implicature
2.4 Question Under Discussion
2.4.1 Question semantics and focus semantics
2.4.2 CQ congruence and DQ relevance
3 Clefts and the related structures
3.1 What is cleft construction?
3.2 Prototypical and non-prototypical clefts
3.2.1 Prototypical clefts
3.2.2 Non-prototypical clefts
3.3 Related structures
3.3.1 Pseudo-clefts
3.3.2 Definite specificational sentences
3.4 Shi...de and its related structures
3.4.1 Shi...de
3.4.2 Bare shi sentences
3.4.3 Bare de sentences
3.4.4 Pseudo-clefts and definite specificational sentences
3.4.5 Verum focus, propositional assertion, and sentence-initial shi
3.5 Interim discussion
4 The interpretation of clefts
4.1 Previous treatments of clefts' exhaustivity
4.1.1 The assertion account
4.1.2 The presupposition account
4.1.3 The conversational implicature account
4.1.4 Empirical evidence
4.2 Contrastivity and the interpretation of clefts
4.2.1 What is contrastivity?
4.2.2 Empirical evidence
4.2.3 Contrastivity and Chinese shi...(de) clefts
4.3 Experimental studies on the interpretation of Mandarin clefts
4.3.1 Experiment 1: Large-scale corpus and web-based experimental study
4.3.2 Experiments 2-4: the status of exhaustivity
4.4 General discussion
5. A unified analysis of shi-clefts
5.1 Unique identification and the semantics of bare shi
5.1.1 Unique identification
5.1.2 The derivation of the semantics of shi
5.1.3 The status of exhaustivity
5.2 Extending the current analysis to related structures
5.2.1 Empirical foundations of the uniform analysis
5.2.2 The analysis of the related structures
5.3 Interim discussion
6. The semantics of de
6.1 Previous analyses
6.1.1 What de cannot be
6.1.2 The aspect marker analyses
6.1.3 Evidentiality and emphatic effect analyses
6.2 Two types of de
6.3 Verum focus de and emphatic effects
6.3.1 De independently manifests emphatic effects
6.3.2 What are the emphatic effects?
6.3.3 Verum shi and de
6.4 Cleft focus de and perfectivity
6.4.1 Perfectivity
6.4.2 de, le, and guo
6.5 Interim discussion
7. Conclusion
References
Index