Much of how we sequence events in speech mirrors the order of their natural occurrence. While event chains that conform to chronology may be easier to process, languages offer substantial freedom to manipulate temporal order. This article explores to what extent digressions from chronology are attributable to differences in grammatical aspect systems. We compared reverse order reports (RORs) in event descriptions elicited from native speakers of four languages, two with (Spanish, Modern Standard Arabic [MSA]) and two without grammatical aspect (German, Hungarian). In the Arabic group, all participants were highly competent MSA speakers from Palestine and Jordan. Standardized frequency counts showed significantly more RORs expressed by non-a...
This article sets out to clarify the contribution of syntactic properties and subject weight for var...
Kousidis S, Schlangen D, Skopeteas S. A cross-linguistic study on turn-taking and temporal alignment...
Collocations are words associated because of their frequent co-occurrence, which makes them predicta...
Research on constituent order is informative about language development and change, since constituen...
This article examines how narratives are structured in a language in which event order is largely no...
The present paper aims at investigating the lexical and grammatical means by which events in written...
This study investigates crosslinguistic influence and conceptual transfer in advanced Chinese learne...
In this paper we present two small sets of ‘comparable bilingual’ and ‘parallel text’ corpora (Berna...
This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an alliance licence...
In a recent essay published in this journal, I illustrated the limitations one may encounter when se...
To test whether the language we speak influences our behavior even when we are not speaking, we aske...
This article explores the insights provided with regard to translation by two sets of "comparable bi...
Subordination and language change: new cross-linguistic approaches and perspectives Deadline for ab...
The scope of planning during sentence formulation is known to be flexible, as it can be influenced b...
En route to acquiring novel principles of temporal information organisation in the target language, ...
This article sets out to clarify the contribution of syntactic properties and subject weight for var...
Kousidis S, Schlangen D, Skopeteas S. A cross-linguistic study on turn-taking and temporal alignment...
Collocations are words associated because of their frequent co-occurrence, which makes them predicta...
Research on constituent order is informative about language development and change, since constituen...
This article examines how narratives are structured in a language in which event order is largely no...
The present paper aims at investigating the lexical and grammatical means by which events in written...
This study investigates crosslinguistic influence and conceptual transfer in advanced Chinese learne...
In this paper we present two small sets of ‘comparable bilingual’ and ‘parallel text’ corpora (Berna...
This publication is with permission of the rights owner freely accessible due to an alliance licence...
In a recent essay published in this journal, I illustrated the limitations one may encounter when se...
To test whether the language we speak influences our behavior even when we are not speaking, we aske...
This article explores the insights provided with regard to translation by two sets of "comparable bi...
Subordination and language change: new cross-linguistic approaches and perspectives Deadline for ab...
The scope of planning during sentence formulation is known to be flexible, as it can be influenced b...
En route to acquiring novel principles of temporal information organisation in the target language, ...
This article sets out to clarify the contribution of syntactic properties and subject weight for var...
Kousidis S, Schlangen D, Skopeteas S. A cross-linguistic study on turn-taking and temporal alignment...
Collocations are words associated because of their frequent co-occurrence, which makes them predicta...