GENGO KENKYU (Journal of the Linguistic Society of Japan)
Online ISSN : 2185-6710
Print ISSN : 0024-3914
Featured There: Corpus-based Linguistic Analysis (2)
A Comparison of Transitive and Intransitive Usages of Japanese “-ka suru” Verbs: Multivariate Analyses of Examples from a Newspaper Corpus
Sachiko KiyamaKatsuo Tamaoka
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2011 Volume 139 Pages 29-56

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Abstract

The present study explored transitive and intransitive usages of Japanese “-ka suru” verbs, based on multivariate analyses of examples from a newspaper corpus. Study 1 investigated ratios of transitive usage, intransitive usage, causative “-saseru” and passive “-sareru” in 24 “-ka suru” verbs, suggesting that a majority of “-ka suru” verbs were likely to be either predominantly transitive or predominantly intransitive. Furthermore, predominantly intransitive usage seemed to have a stronger effect than predominantly transitive usage. Study 2 examined how the two factors of positive/negative antecedent meaning and transitive/intransitive usages influence positive/negative meaning at the sentence level with the use of “-ka suru” verbs. Results revealed that positive/negative antecedent meaning had the strongest influence in determining positive/negative meaning at the sentence level. At the same time, transitive/intransitive usage had strong effect on positive/negative meaning at the sentence level when a “-ka suru” verb was predominantly transitive with its neutral antecedent meaning.

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© 2011 The Linguistic Society of Japan, Authors
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