Over the past few decades, Second Language Acquisition (SLA) research has shown a growing interest in linguistic relativity, specifically in Slobin’s (1987, 1996) thinking-for-speaking hypothesis. The thinking-for-speaking hypothesis posits that language-specific structures direct the speaker’s attention to specific aspects of objects and events; such perceived information is then organized according to what can be grammatically coded in the speaker’s first language (L1s). This volume probes a possible interference of L1-based cognition with second language (L2) development. As pointed out by ZhaoHong Han, the first editor, this volume regards Slobin’s thinking-for-speaking hypothesis as one of the several promising accounts for such SLA ph...
Studies of thinking-for-speaking (Slobin, 1987) and of linguistic relativity (Gumperz & Levinson, 19...
This Special Issue of Language Learning presents an interdisciplinary state-of-the-art overview of c...
Cross-linguistic research has shown that languages differ typologically in how motion events are ind...
Over the past few decades, Second Language Acquisition (SLA) research has shown a growing interest i...
The purpose of the current article is to support the investigation of linguistic relativity in secon...
The purpose of the current article is to support the investigation of linguistic relativity in secon...
This article evaluates how the different papers in this special issue fill a gap in our understandin...
Slobin’s (1996) thinking for speaking hypothesis has been recently adopted by second language resear...
For more than a decade, studies on second language (L2) lexicalization patterns of motion events hav...
This study aims to investigate the relationship between language and thought in motion events encodi...
Extending Whorf\u27s popular notion of linguistic relativity (LR) to bilingual contexts, one would a...
The purpose of this thesis is to provide a global overview on the studies that have been carried out...
This opening article introduces the reader to current topics in research on language and thought in ...
Language is the ultimate tool to describe our environment, communicate about our inner states, and a...
This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Athanasopoulos, P., Damjanovic, L., Burn...
Studies of thinking-for-speaking (Slobin, 1987) and of linguistic relativity (Gumperz & Levinson, 19...
This Special Issue of Language Learning presents an interdisciplinary state-of-the-art overview of c...
Cross-linguistic research has shown that languages differ typologically in how motion events are ind...
Over the past few decades, Second Language Acquisition (SLA) research has shown a growing interest i...
The purpose of the current article is to support the investigation of linguistic relativity in secon...
The purpose of the current article is to support the investigation of linguistic relativity in secon...
This article evaluates how the different papers in this special issue fill a gap in our understandin...
Slobin’s (1996) thinking for speaking hypothesis has been recently adopted by second language resear...
For more than a decade, studies on second language (L2) lexicalization patterns of motion events hav...
This study aims to investigate the relationship between language and thought in motion events encodi...
Extending Whorf\u27s popular notion of linguistic relativity (LR) to bilingual contexts, one would a...
The purpose of this thesis is to provide a global overview on the studies that have been carried out...
This opening article introduces the reader to current topics in research on language and thought in ...
Language is the ultimate tool to describe our environment, communicate about our inner states, and a...
This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Athanasopoulos, P., Damjanovic, L., Burn...
Studies of thinking-for-speaking (Slobin, 1987) and of linguistic relativity (Gumperz & Levinson, 19...
This Special Issue of Language Learning presents an interdisciplinary state-of-the-art overview of c...
Cross-linguistic research has shown that languages differ typologically in how motion events are ind...