Positioning of Chinese time nouns and adverbs: Evidence from corpus, acceptability, and processing studies

This study examines the syntactic placement and cognitive processing of time nouns and time adverbs in Mandarin Chinese, a language without overt tense morphology, highlighting how these temporal expressions interface with Chinese grammar. Study 1 analyzed a large-scale natural language corpus (BLCU...

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Published inPloS one Vol. 20; no. 7; p. e0329271
Main Authors Chen, Jia Yi, Su, Ying, Tamaoka, Katsuo
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Public Library of Science 01.07.2025
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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Summary:This study examines the syntactic placement and cognitive processing of time nouns and time adverbs in Mandarin Chinese, a language without overt tense morphology, highlighting how these temporal expressions interface with Chinese grammar. Study 1 analyzed a large-scale natural language corpus (BLCU Chinese Corpus) to determine the typical positions of time nouns and time adverbs relative to the subject. The results revealed distinct distributional patterns: time nouns occurred flexibly either before or after the subject, while time adverbs appeared predominantly in post-subject (sentence-internal) positions. Study 2 investigated native Mandarin speakers’ acceptability judgments of sentences with time expressions in various positions. Sentences in which time nouns followed the subject were rated as more acceptable and supported the canonical word order, whereas pre-subject time nouns were acceptable mainly in topicalized contexts. In contrast, time adverbs were strongly preferred in post-subject positions, with only a few exceptions where certain adverbs could be fronted. Study 3 examined the real-time comprehension of these structures using reaction time and accuracy. Results showed that sentences with time expressions in non-canonical positions incurred greater processing costs, while canonical post-subject placements facilitated faster and more accurate processing. These findings suggest that the human sentence processor is sensitive to structural preferences for temporal expressions, mirroring patterns in natural use and grammatical acceptability. By integrating corpus analysis, acceptability judgments, and psycholinguistic data, this study provides a comprehensive account of how time nouns and time adverbs are positioned and processed in Chinese, offering broader implications for understanding temporal reference in tenseless languages.
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Competing Interests: We declare that there are no conflicts of interest or competing interests that might bias our work, and we have disclosed all funding sources.
Graduate School of Humanities, Nagoya University, Furocho, Chikusa, Nagoya, Aichi, Japan
School of Foreign Languages, Shanghai University, 99 Shangda Road, Baoshan District, Shanghai, China
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0329271