Exploring the Internal Mechanisms and Cognitive Pattern of Mandarin Syllables from Speech Errors

By / 08-14-2024 /

Social Sciences in China (Chinese Edition)

No. 6, 2024

 

Exploring the Internal Mechanisms and Cognitive Pattern of Mandarin Syllables from Speech Errors

(Abstract)

 

He Dan and Shen Jiaxuan

 

Through the analysis of genuine speech errors, this study elucidates the internal mechanisms and cognitive patterns of Mandarin syllables. It has been found that the segmental configuration of Mandarin syllables adheres to an exponential “1—2—4” expansion mechanism, with the indivisible nature of tones preserving and determining the integrity of the syllables. This discovery suggests that the Mandarin syllabic mechanism represents “relation” rather than definite physical measurement, thereby resolving the “syllable primacy problem that has eluded Western linguistic circles for several decades. Syllables and syllable-words (both called zi) play a pivotal role in Chinese language construction, because starting from the basic unit zi, the phonological pattern and the syntactic structure of the language both adhere to the exponential expansion mechanism. This finding will deepen our understanding of the hypothetical universal grammar of language. The internal exponential mechanism of Chinese syllables is consistent with that of the unit beat in musical systems, with both phenomena belonging to the field of psychology. Similarly, the core models of the basic units of language and music share similarities with the “photon” model of physics.