Previous decades have seen many studies on the expression of motion in language. Most are based on Talmy’s (1985) motion event typology. While providing robust support for the typology, variations within and across typological groups have also been reported, leading to proposals to either expand the typology (Slobin, 2004; Ameka & Essegbey, 2013) or to understand it as a set of strategies that languages avail themselves of (Beavers et al., 2010; Croft et al., 2010). To further contribute to this line of research, this article examines the expression of voluntary motion by adult speakers of a Turkic language, modern Uyghur. Our analyses reveal that Uyghur is a prototypically verb-framed language. It is different from English (considered sate...
The way adults express manner and path components of a motion event varies across typologically diff...
Motion-event typology has moved into a “post-Talmian” terrain of approaches focusing on an open-ende...
Motion-event typology has moved into a “post-Talmian” terrain of approaches focusing on an open-ende...
There are a large number of researches on the uses of goal-oriented and non-goal-oriented verbs (cor...
The NINJAL project on Motion Event Descriptions Across Languages (MEDAL) is a collaborative research...
Motions verbs differ across languages in respect of spatial relations and syntactic/semantic concept...
<p>The current study examines how gestural representations of motion events arise from linguistic ex...
Linguistic systems encode spatial information in strikingly different ways. Talmy (2000) classified ...
The article describes the meaning of the term "style of movement", its place in Uzbek and Turkish li...
The present dissertation reports the results of a multi-disciplinary experimental study, which combi...
Languages differ in the ways they divide the world. This study applies cluster analysis to understan...
This article deals with the lexical and semantic issues of verbs of motion in English and Uzbek. At ...
The article deals with the theoretical and comparative analysis of the verbs of movement in the Uzbe...
The article deals with the theoretical and comparative analysis of the verbs of movement in the Uzbe...
This thesis explores the implications of Talmy’s (1986; 2000a; 2000b) motion event typology and Slob...
The way adults express manner and path components of a motion event varies across typologically diff...
Motion-event typology has moved into a “post-Talmian” terrain of approaches focusing on an open-ende...
Motion-event typology has moved into a “post-Talmian” terrain of approaches focusing on an open-ende...
There are a large number of researches on the uses of goal-oriented and non-goal-oriented verbs (cor...
The NINJAL project on Motion Event Descriptions Across Languages (MEDAL) is a collaborative research...
Motions verbs differ across languages in respect of spatial relations and syntactic/semantic concept...
<p>The current study examines how gestural representations of motion events arise from linguistic ex...
Linguistic systems encode spatial information in strikingly different ways. Talmy (2000) classified ...
The article describes the meaning of the term "style of movement", its place in Uzbek and Turkish li...
The present dissertation reports the results of a multi-disciplinary experimental study, which combi...
Languages differ in the ways they divide the world. This study applies cluster analysis to understan...
This article deals with the lexical and semantic issues of verbs of motion in English and Uzbek. At ...
The article deals with the theoretical and comparative analysis of the verbs of movement in the Uzbe...
The article deals with the theoretical and comparative analysis of the verbs of movement in the Uzbe...
This thesis explores the implications of Talmy’s (1986; 2000a; 2000b) motion event typology and Slob...
The way adults express manner and path components of a motion event varies across typologically diff...
Motion-event typology has moved into a “post-Talmian” terrain of approaches focusing on an open-ende...
Motion-event typology has moved into a “post-Talmian” terrain of approaches focusing on an open-ende...