Languages encode motion in strikingly different ways. Languages such as English communicate the manner of motion through verbs (e.g., roll, pop), while languages such as Greek often lexicalize the path of motion in verbs (e.g., ascend, pass). In a set of studies with English- and Greek-speaking adults and 5-year-olds, we ask how such lexical constraints are combined with structural cues in hypothesizing meanings for novel motion verbs. We show that lexicalization biases generate different interpretations of novel motion verbs across ages and languages; furthermore, they generalize to the domain of caused motion. Crucially, these language-specific effects interact with universal mappings between syntactic structure and semantic content, and ...
Theoretical claims about typologically constrained differences in how speakers habitually describe p...
Languages vary strikingly in how they encode motion events. In some languages (e.g. English), manner...
Theoretical claims about typologically constrained differences in how speakers habitually describe p...
Languages differ in how they package the components of an event into words to form sentences. For ex...
This study explores children’s encoding of novel verbs referring to motion events, and finds influen...
This study explores children’s encoding of novel verbs referring to motion events, and finds influen...
Most English descriptions of motion events express manner in the main verb and path in a preposition...
Most English descriptions of motion events express manner in the main verb and path in a preposition...
Most English descriptions of motion events express manner in the main verb and path in a preposition...
Most English descriptions of motion events express manner in the main verb and path in a preposition...
Most English descriptions of motion events express manner in the main verb and path in a preposition...
Languages differ systematically in how they map path and manner of motion onto lexical and grammatic...
Motions verbs differ across languages in respect of spatial relations and syntactic/semantic concept...
Language is widely assumed to play a role in memory by offering an additional medium of encoding vis...
Previous research on motion expression indicates that typological properties influence how speakers ...
Theoretical claims about typologically constrained differences in how speakers habitually describe p...
Languages vary strikingly in how they encode motion events. In some languages (e.g. English), manner...
Theoretical claims about typologically constrained differences in how speakers habitually describe p...
Languages differ in how they package the components of an event into words to form sentences. For ex...
This study explores children’s encoding of novel verbs referring to motion events, and finds influen...
This study explores children’s encoding of novel verbs referring to motion events, and finds influen...
Most English descriptions of motion events express manner in the main verb and path in a preposition...
Most English descriptions of motion events express manner in the main verb and path in a preposition...
Most English descriptions of motion events express manner in the main verb and path in a preposition...
Most English descriptions of motion events express manner in the main verb and path in a preposition...
Most English descriptions of motion events express manner in the main verb and path in a preposition...
Languages differ systematically in how they map path and manner of motion onto lexical and grammatic...
Motions verbs differ across languages in respect of spatial relations and syntactic/semantic concept...
Language is widely assumed to play a role in memory by offering an additional medium of encoding vis...
Previous research on motion expression indicates that typological properties influence how speakers ...
Theoretical claims about typologically constrained differences in how speakers habitually describe p...
Languages vary strikingly in how they encode motion events. In some languages (e.g. English), manner...
Theoretical claims about typologically constrained differences in how speakers habitually describe p...