1879
DOI: 10.1017/s0035869x00017251
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Art. X.—Principles of Composition in Chinese as deduced from the Written Characters

Abstract: It has often been said that there is no Grammar in Chinese; and the statement is true. When we speak of “grammar,” with reference to the written characters, or even to the spoken language, of the people of China, the term must be understood in a peculiar sense. Grammar, as the Greek derivation shows, has to do with words, and is applicable only to languages that have an alphabet; whereas the Chinese written characters were at first pictures and ideagrams, and they have continued to be so substantially during a… Show more

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