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Language change in premodern China: Notes on its perception and impact on the idea of a “Constant Way.”

In Helwig Schmidt-Glintzer, Achim Mittag & Jörn Rüsen (eds.), Historical Truth, Historical Criticism, and Ideology: Chinese Historiography and Historical Culture From a New Comparative Perspective. Brill. pp. 13--51 (2005)

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  1. Morphological notes on the Old Chinese counterfactual.Wolfgang Behr - 2006 - Bochumer Jahrbuch Zur Ostasienforschung 30:55-88.
    The claim that Chinese had neither unambiguous, nor obligatory syntactic or morphological markers of counterfactuality, which has loomed large with philosophers of language, sinologists, and cognitive psychologists during the better part of the 20th century, is reviewed here from a diachronic and typological perspective, focussing on Old Chinese. In contradistinction from the cross-linguistically widespread use of past-tense morphology or, less commonly, of dissociative spatial markers, the predominant strategy to mark counterfactuals in OC was ‘direct’ assertion in the protasis. It made (...)
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