A Generative Lexicon Perspective to Possessive Relation in
Mandarin Chinese
Shan WANG Chu-Ren HUANG
Department of Chinese and Bilingual Studies, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Hung Hom, Kowloon, Hong Kong
wangshanstar@gmail.com; churenhuang@gmail.com
Abstract: This paper investigates possessive relation of Possessor DE Possessee construction based on the
generative lexicon theory. For possessive relation, it is found that either possessors or possessees can come
from natural types, artifactual types and complex types; the semantic types of possessive relation are
different when the possessor and possessee belong to different individual domains; the typicality of qualia
roles in possessive relation is constitutive < formal < agentive < telic; qualia structure does not explain all
possessive relation; artifactual types and complex types always lead to ambiguity or polysemy respectively;
a possessee selects different qualia roles of the possessor. For the extension of the generative lexicon theory,
first, some criteria to distinguish natural types from artifactual types are suggested; second, the scope of the
constitutive role of qualia structure is enlarged by including a location and its constituents, a period of time
and its constituents, and an institution and its members.
Keywords: natural, artifactul, complex, possessive relation
1. Introduction
Possessive relation is an important topic in linguistics. Zhu (1982) introduced some
common relations between a modifier and its head, in which “NP1 (DE) NP2” mainly has
the following relations: the modifier is a possessor (wǒmen de xuéxiào ‘our school’ |
gōngshè de shēngkou ‘the commune’s animals’), material (mùtou fángzi ‘wooden houses’
| sùliào kǒudai ‘plastic bags’), time and location (zuótiān de bào ‘yesterday’s newpaper’ |
běijīng de tiānqì ‘Beijing’s weather’). Lu (2003) further summarizes 17 possessive
relations: appellation, ownership, organ, component, material, property, feature, idea,
member, deformation, achievement, product, condition, wound, career, landscape,
location, and ability.
Based on these important studies, this paper examines one type of possessive
relations ‘Possessor DE Possessee’ from a different perspective, namely on the basis of
the generative lexicon theory (henceforth GLT), which was first proposed in Pustejovsky
(1991) and further developed in Pustejovsky (1995), with the goal of capturing the
generative nature of lexical creativity and sense extension phenomena. The aims of this
paper are to find out the relation between a possessor and its possessee based on GTL,
explore univocal, ambiguous and polysemous possessive relations, and improve GLT.
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The data of this study are extracted from Sinica Corpus1 using Chinese word sketch
engine2, collected online by google and baidu, or provided by informants.
The following sections are arranged as follows. Section 2 introduces GLT and our
expansion of it. Section 3 explores the relation between a possessor and its possessee.
Section 4 discusses univocal, ambiguous and polysemous possessive relations. Finally,
the conclusion and suggestion for future work are summarized in Section 5.
2. Generative Lexicon Theory
2.1 Qualia Structure
Pustejovsky (1995) investigates how lexical items encode semantic information in
the qualia structure. There are four roles in a qualia structure, and each is associated with
some values: (i) the constitutive role is about the relation between an object and its
constituents or parts. Its role values include material, weight, parts and component
elements; (ii) the formal role can distinguish the object within a larger domain.
Orientation, magnitude, shape, dimensionality, color, and position are its role values; (iii)
the telic role is about the purpose and function of the object; (iv) the agentive role
describes factors involved in the origin of an object, such as creator, artifact, natural kind,
causal chain.
This paper extends the scope of the constitutive role by including a location or a
period of time and its constituents, an institution and its member.
2.2 Domain of Individuals
(Pustejovsky 2001, 2006; Pustejovsky & Jezek 2008) separate the domain of
individuals into three distinct levels: (i) natural types that direct at the formal and
constitutive qualia roles; (ii) artifactual types that refer to telic or agentive roles; (iii)
complex types that make references to the relation between types.
Pustejovsky proposes that natural types refer to constitutive or formal role, while
artifactual types refer to telic or agentive role. However, this is not an absolute
delimitation. Natural types can also have telic and agentive roles. For example, the water
we drink has the telic of maintaining our life and is purified through sedimentation,
filtration and disinfection. Nevertheless, natural types need to presuppose an event in
order to refer to telic or agentive role. For instance, the agentive role of water is not
inherent; sedimentation, filtration and disinfection are contextualized event. Artifactual
types can have constitutive role and formal role. For example, the constituents of a pen
are the nib, the reservoir and the body. A pen has shape and color as well, which is its
formal role. Nevertheless, these are just contextual information; only the telic role is
inherent, that is, a pen is for writing.
Human activity penetrates almost every corner of life and therefore it is sometimes
hard to distinguish natural types from artifactual types. If we trace back a table that is
1 http://db1x.sinica.edu.tw/kiwi/mkiwi/
2 http://158.132.124.36/
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made of wood, we will find that wood is a part of a tree, which is natural. But as the table
is man-made and even if its material is natural, we consider it artifactual. Even human
beings can be artifactual, such as test-tube babies.
Confronted with the above difficulty of distinguishing natural types and artifactual
types, this paper sets the following criteria to differentiate the two types, as complements
to Pustejovsky (1995).
(i) Whether an object can originate without human labor
If an object can never come into being without human involvement, then it is not
natural. For instance, a table can never exist if no one bothers to make it.
(ii) Whether an Object can Originate in Nature
Examples like niúnǎi ‘milk’, xiāngjiāo ‘bananas’, qíncài ‘celery’ are objects of
nature, even if the bananas we eat are picked from a farm, which are grown by a farmer.
(iii)Time and Location
Time and location are natural, even though the name we use to address certain time
or place is artifactual. For example, though tángcháo ‘Tang Dynasty’ is established by
lǐyuān ‘Yuan LI’, it is natural as a period of time in history.
3. Relation between Possessor and Possessee
This section instigates the relation between a possessor and its possessee.
3.1 Generative Lexicon Perspective
This section describes possessive relation from a generative lexicon perspective.
Firstly, the qualia role that is in use between a possessor and its possessee is examined.
Then we figure out the possible semantic types of combination between them according
to the domain of individuals, namely natural types, artifactual types and complex types.
3.1 .1 Possessee as a Constitutive Role of Poessessor
In a possessive relation, a possessee typically acts as a constitutive role of their
possessor. The following part examines the subtypes of the constitutive role in possessive
relations and the semantic types of the possessor and possessee combination.
3.1.1.1 Possessive Relations with Possessors from Natural Types
When a possessor belongs to natural types, its possessee can be from natural types,
artifactual types or complex types. Therefore there are three types of collocations:
Natural DE Natural, Natural DE Artifactual, and Natural DE Complex.
(i) Natural DE Natural
When a possessor and its possessee both belong to natural types, the possessee is
usually an integral part or pieces of it. For instance, when a possessor is non-sentient, e.g.
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a natural object, location, time, some possessive relations are as follows: Natural DE
Constituents: shāmò de fēngshā ‘a desert’s sand’, shèngxià de yángguāng ‘midsummer’s
sunshine’; Location DE Natural: qīngzhōu de mìtáo ‘Qingzhou’s nectarines’, shāndōng
de tàishān ‘Shandong’s Tai Mountain’; Time DE Natural: 2002 nián de xuě ‘snow of the
year 2002’, qīngcháo de huángdì ‘the Qing Dynasty’s emperors’. When a possessor is
sentient, the possessee is usually a part of it, e.g. Sentient Possessor DE Constituents: rén
de xìbāo ‘human cells’, huángfēng de chìbǎng ‘a hornet’s wings’.
(ii) Natural DE Artifactual
This construction can have the following subtypes: Sentient Possessor DE Artifact:
xiǎogǒu de wō ‘a puppy’s nest’; Location DE Artifact: zhōucūn de shāobing ‘Zhoucun’s
biscuits’; Time DE Event: qīmò de kǎoshì ‘final exams’.
(iii) Natural DE Complex
These subtypes are possible for this construction: Human DE Complex: liǔchuánzhì
de liánxiǎng ‘LIU Chuanzhi’s Lenovo’, Location DE Complex: gǔlàngyǔ de yīnyuèhuì
‘Gulangyu’s concerts’ and Time DE Complex: qùnián de xìn ‘last year’s letters’.
3.1.1.2 Possessive Relations with Possessors from Artifactual Types
When a possessor comes from natural types, the possessees can be natural types,
artifactual types or complex types, so there are three kinds of construction: Artifactual
DE Natural, Artifactual DE Artifactual, and Artifactual DE Complex.
(i) Artifactual DE Natural
The subtypes of this construction include: Artifact DE Constituent: xiāngyān de
nígǔdīng ‘cigarettes’ nicotine’; Organization DE Member: gōngchǎng de gōngrén ‘a
factory’s workers’, yánjiūsuǒ de yánjiūyuán ‘an institute’s researchers’.
(ii) Artifactual DE Artifactual
This kind of possessive relation is very large and has several subtypes. When the
posessee is an integral part of the possessor, examples are shuǐjiǎo de xiàn’ér
‘dumpling’s stuffing’, chéngbǎo de chéngqiáng ‘a castle’s walls’, bōli de suìpiàn ‘pieces
of the glass’, shèyǐngjī de yíngmù ‘a video camera’s screen’. When the possesses is things
of a place, an example is zhōucūn de shāobing ‘Zhoucun’s biscuits’.
(iii) Artifactual DE Complex
An instance of this construction is dàlóu de chuānghu ‘a building’s windows’.
3.1.1.3 Possessive Relations with Possessors from Complex Types
If a possessor falls into a complex type, the possessees can be from natural,
artifactual or complex types. Thus their combinations include: Complex DE Natural,
Complex DE Artifactual, and Complex DE Complex.
(i) Complex DE Natural
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An example of this construction is zǎocān de niúnǎi ‘breakfast’s milk’.
(ii) Complex DE Artifactual
Some examples are yǎnchànghuì de yīnyuè ‘a concert’s music’, bàozhǐ de wénzì ‘a
newpaper’s characters’, màidāngláo de shèbèi ‘McDonald's devices’.
(iii) Complex DE Complex
In this construction, both the possessor and possessee are complex types. For
instance, yǎnjiǎng is event·info, bǐjì is physo·info, and yǎnjiǎng de bǐjì ‘a speech’s notes’
is a case in point.
3.1.2 Possessee is a Formal Role of Possessor
A possessee can function as a formal role of its possessor, and the possible
combinations and examples are Natural DE Natural: niúpí de tánxìng ‘cowhide’s
elasticity’; Artifactual DE Natural: bōli de yánsè ‘the color of the glass’, dàlóu de
wàiguān ‘the appearance of a building’; Complex DE Natural: bàozhǐ de chǐcùn ‘a
newspaper’s size’, chá de wèidào ‘tea’s taste’, báigōng de wèizhi ‘the White House’s
position’.
3.1.3 Possessor or Possesee is an Agentive Role
Possessees can be an agentive role of possessors, indicating the origin or coming
about. For example, Natural DE Natural: tā de māma ‘his mother’, hǎi de shēngyīn
‘sea’s sound’; Artifactual DE Natural: gōngchǎng de zàoyīn ‘a factory’s noise’.
3.2 Other Relations between Possessor and Possessee
Besides the relations that can be accounted for using GLT, there are some other
relations between a possessor and its possessees. For instance, three types of such
relations are: (i) the possessor is a human, and the possessee is his/her property. For
instance, Natural DE Artifactual: nǚshēng de liúhǎi ‘girls’ bangs’, xiǎolǐ de běntián
‘Xiao Li’s Honda’; (ii) the possessor is human, and the possessee is his/her idea. For
example, Natural DE Artifactual: tā de yìjiàn ‘his views’; (iii) the possessee is time or
location, and the possessee is part of it. For instance, Natural DE Natural: gōngzhǔ de
shēngrì ‘a princess’ birthday’, fùqīn de jiāxiāng ‘father’s hometown’.
The above analysis is summarized in Table 1.
Table 1: Relation between Possessor and Possessee
Possessee Possessor
Natural Artifactual Complex
Natural constitutive, formal, time, location
time, location, property,
idea, social relation constitutive
Artifactual constitutive, formal constitutive constitutive
Complex constitutive, formal constitutive constitutive
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Table 1 illustrates the following facts for the Possessor DE Possessee construction.
First, either possessors or possessees can belong to natural types, artifactual types
and complex types.
Second, when a possessor belongs to the natural type, its natural type possessee can
be a constitutive role, a formal role, time or a location of it; its artifactual type possessee
can be time, a location, a property, an idea, or social relation of it; its complex type
possessees usually serves as a constitutive role.
Third, when a possessor is from artifactual types or complex types, its natural type
possessee can be a constitutive role or formal role of it; its artifactual type and complex
type possessee are usually the constitutive role of it.
Fourth, a possessee most typically takes a constitutive role, followed by a formal
role. The agentive role is sometimes used and telic role is rarely used. Therefore the
qualia structure hierarchy for possessees in possessive relation is depicted below:
constitutive < formal < agentive < telic
Fifth, qualia structure cannot explain all possessive relations. For example, when
time, location, property, or social relation serves as possessees, they are not qualia roles.
4. Univocal, Ambiguous and Polysemous Possessive Relations
4.1 Univocal Possessive Relations
The Possessor DE Possessee construction can be univocal. For instance, when the
possessee is an integral part or pieces of the possessor, e.g. jīnyú de wěiba ‘the tail of a
goldfish’ and bōli de suìpiàn ‘pieces of the glass’, a formal role of the possessor, e.g.
xuéxiào de wèizhi ‘the location of the school’, or possessive relation is about social
relation, e.g. xiǎomíng de jiěfu ‘Xiaoming’s brother-in-law’, the Possessor DE Possessee
construction has only one meaning.
4.2 Ambiguous and Polysemous Possessive Relations
If an arifactual type has two or more senses, it can be ambiguous. A complex type
has more than one meaning facet, and it is polysemous. A word with two or more
meaning facets is a dot object.
When an ambiguous artifactual type or a polysemous complex type acts as a
possessor or possessee, possessive relation collocation can have two or more explanations.
Sometimes all the explanations are acceptable and sometimes only one is acceptable. The
following section shows what explanation is reached when the possessor, possessee, or
both of them, are ambiguous or polysemous.
4.2.1 Possessive Relation with an Ambiguous or Polysemous Possessor
This part explores the meaning when the possessor is ambiguous and polysemous.
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4.2.1.1 Possessive Relation with an Ambiguous Possessor
When the possessor has more than more senses, and the possessee has only one
sense, usually only one sense of the possessor will be activated. For example, xiàngqí
‘chesses’ has two senses: physical objects or an event.
(1) a. yībān gāodàng xiàngqí yóu guìzhòng mùcái huò yùshí zhìchéng。
(physical object)
generally high-grade chess from valuable wood or jade make
‘Generally high-grade chesses are made of valuable wood or jade.’
b. jìnniánlái, měiguó wán xiàngqí de rén yuèláiyuèduō。(event)
recent years America play chess DE people more and more
‘Recent years in America, more and more people play chess.’
In Artifactual DE Natural construction, such as xiàngqí de xíngzhuàng ‘’, only the
‘physical objects’ sense of xiàngqí ‘chesses’ is activated, as illustrated below.
4.2.1.2 Possessive Relation with a Polysemous Possessor
When the possessor has more than one meaning facet while the possessee is
univocal, the possessee will activate one meaning facet of the possessor. The following
shows examples in Complex DE Natural and Complex DE Artifactual constructions.
(i) Complex DE Natural
zǎocān ‘breakfast’ is a dot object (event · physical obeject). In zǎocān de niúnǎi
‘breakfast’s milk’, the ‘physical object’ aspect is exploited.
zǎocān ‘breakfast’ niúnǎi ‘milk’
a physical object a physical object
an event
(ii) Complex DE Artifactual
yǎnchànghuì ‘a concert’, as a dot object, can refer to an event or music. For instance:
xiàngqí ‘chesses’ xíngzhuàng ‘shape’
a physical object formal
an event
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(2) a. nánfēi shìjièbēi guānfāng yǎnchànghuì xiānqǐ xiànchǎng yī
South Africa the World Cup official concert lift on-site a
piàn gāocháo。(event)
CL climax
‘The official concert of the World Cup in South Africa lifted an on-site climax.’
b. yǎnchànghuì chāo hǎo tīng。(music)
concert super pleasant hear
‘The concert is fantastic.’
In yǎnchànghuì de yīnyuè, yǎnchànghuì is pointing to the event.
Similarly, bàozhǐ can mean information, physical object or agency. In bàozhǐ de
wénzì ‘a newspaper’s characters’, only the ‘physical object’ aspect is reasonable.
bàozhǐ ‘a newspaper’ wénzì ‘characters’
a physical object a physical object
information
an agency
4.2.2 Possessive Relation with an Ambiguous or Polysemou
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