Outline of Classical Chinese Grammar is a comprehensive introduction
to the syntactical analysis of classical Chinese. Focusing on the
language of the high classical period, which ranges from the time of
Confucius to the unification of the empire by Qin in 221, the book pays
particular attention to the Mencius, the Lúnyu, and, to a lesser extent,
the Zuõzhuàn texts.
Outline of Classical Chinese Grammar starts with a brief historical
overview and a discussion of the relation between the writing system and
the phonology. This is followed by an outline of overall principles of
word order and sentence structure. The next sections deal with the main
sentence types - nominal predicates, verbal predicates, and numberical
expressions, which constitute a special type of quasiverbal predication.
The final sections cover such topics as subordinate constitutents of
sentences, nondeclarative sentence types, and complex sentences.