Introduction and Scope
Journal of Chinese Linguistics (JCL) is a peer reviewed academic journal published biannually. Established in 1973, JCL explores Chinese languages and linguistics in the light of human complexity. The journal covers a wide range of areas of research including phonetics, phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics, applied linguistics, historical linguistics, computational linguistics, psycholinguistics, sociolinguistics, neurolinguistics, evolutionary linguistics and any other recognized facet of Chinese linguistics study. The JCL publishing office operated at the University of California at Berkeley, USA, from 1973 to 2007. It was relocated to The Chinese University of Hong Kong in 2008, and expanded its presence in China with the opening of a new office in Beijing Language and Culture University in 2019. On August 7, 2023, the Macao editorial office of the Journal was officially launched and the Chinese University of Hong Kong editorial office was restructured to a liaison office.
Journal of Chinese Linguistics also publishes monograph series. Please refer to the JCL Monograph Series (JCLMS) page for more details.
Editors: Shengli Feng, Beijing Language and Culture University
Jie Xu, University of Macau
Honorary Editor: William S-Y. Wang, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University
News&Events
Memorial Tributes
Recently Published Articles
Grammaticalized uses of the postverbal locative prepositional phrase in Lianhua Gan
Grammaticalized uses of the postverbal locative prepositional phrase
Shì as a complementizer
Shì as a complementizer
Tense and lax vowels in the Lahu dialect of Yunshan: A laboratory phonological study
Tense and lax vowels in the Lahu dialect
Phonation types and morpho-phonological structure as linguistic prerequisites of tonogenesis
Phonation types and morpho-phonological structure as linguistic prerequisites
The role of breathy voice in Hmu tone perception
The role of breathy voice in Hmu tone
The phonetic realization of laryngeal contrasts in Lili Wu Chinese: Evidence from tone-sandhi medial position
The phonetic realization of laryngeal contrasts in Lili