This chapter is concerned with the literal or figurative interpretation of the caused-motion construction and aims to identify the constructional meanings of intransitive non-motion verbs occurring in this construction thus coerced into transitivity through processes of metaphorization. The theoretical goal is pursued with reference to the framework of the Lexical-Constructional Model
The chapter takes into account the metaphorical projection of motion onto the domain of cognition. S...
As part of a long-term project investigating the relevance of phenomenology for (cognitive) linguist...
Expressions of motion reflect the conceptualization of events central to human beings. Most studies ...
This chapter is concerned with the literal or figurative interpretation of the caused-motion constru...
This article addresses the caused-motion construction from the theoretical perspective of the Lexica...
This article addresses the caused-motion construction from the theoretical perspective of the Lexica...
The paper shows how meaning is constructed in the caused-motion construction and explains the concep...
This paper offers an Embodied Construc-tion Grammar (Feldman et al. 2010) rep-resentation of caused ...
The paper analyses some instances of the Caused-Motion Construction where intransitive verbs of perc...
The Lexical Constructional Model (LCM henceforth; Ruiz de Mendoza & Mairal 2007, 2009; Baicchi 2008)...
The paper shows that meaning is not encoded sic et simpliciter in linguistic units, but linguistic u...
This article sets out to examine causal constructions by focusing on a particular verbal class, name...
Constructions will be here conceived of not simply as “learned pairings of form with semantic or dis...
Within the field of Cognitive Linguistics, Goldberg’s (1995) approach to Cons-truction Grammar offer...
It has been suggested that the semantics of some metaphoricalmotion constructions is related to the ...
The chapter takes into account the metaphorical projection of motion onto the domain of cognition. S...
As part of a long-term project investigating the relevance of phenomenology for (cognitive) linguist...
Expressions of motion reflect the conceptualization of events central to human beings. Most studies ...
This chapter is concerned with the literal or figurative interpretation of the caused-motion constru...
This article addresses the caused-motion construction from the theoretical perspective of the Lexica...
This article addresses the caused-motion construction from the theoretical perspective of the Lexica...
The paper shows how meaning is constructed in the caused-motion construction and explains the concep...
This paper offers an Embodied Construc-tion Grammar (Feldman et al. 2010) rep-resentation of caused ...
The paper analyses some instances of the Caused-Motion Construction where intransitive verbs of perc...
The Lexical Constructional Model (LCM henceforth; Ruiz de Mendoza & Mairal 2007, 2009; Baicchi 2008)...
The paper shows that meaning is not encoded sic et simpliciter in linguistic units, but linguistic u...
This article sets out to examine causal constructions by focusing on a particular verbal class, name...
Constructions will be here conceived of not simply as “learned pairings of form with semantic or dis...
Within the field of Cognitive Linguistics, Goldberg’s (1995) approach to Cons-truction Grammar offer...
It has been suggested that the semantics of some metaphoricalmotion constructions is related to the ...
The chapter takes into account the metaphorical projection of motion onto the domain of cognition. S...
As part of a long-term project investigating the relevance of phenomenology for (cognitive) linguist...
Expressions of motion reflect the conceptualization of events central to human beings. Most studies ...