@article{oai:muroran-it.repo.nii.ac.jp:00008315, author = {橋本, 邦彦 and HASHIMOTO, Kunihiko}, journal = {室蘭工業大学紀要, Memoirs of the Muroran Institute of Technology}, month = {Nov}, note = {application/pdf, Converbal clauses combine with main clauses on the basis of a variety of semantic relationships. They are widely observed in many languages such as Japanese and Russian. Mongolian is another converbal type of language, using a number of suffixes added to verb stems to form nonfinite clauses. The suffixes divide into two groups, depending an whether they can take an accusative subject. The purpose of this paper is to clearly explicate the syntactic environments which allow the accusative subject to occur in them, investigating the following three syntactic combinations between the converbals and the main clauses: simplex subordination, coordifiation and complex surbodinatiog. This explication demonstrates to us that the converbals are not adverbial "clauses" as claimed in preceding works but are adverbial "phrases". The Mongolian converbal construction is not a complex sentence consisting of two clauses but a simplex one containing two subjects like the nominative and the accusative., 投稿論文}, pages = {157--166}, title = {副動詞構文の対格形主語}, volume = {50}, year = {2000}, yomi = {ハシモト, クニヒコ} }