This paper investigates the lexical choices made by speakers of Ladin in describing the opening scene of Mayer’s (1969) Frog, where are you? in Ladin and in the other languages they learnt later in life (Italian, German and English). The focus of the investigation is on motion lexicalisation, which varies across languages in terms of preferred encoding patterns (Talmy 1985, 2000; Wälchli 2001). Relative frequencies are calculated for the variants occurring in the different languages, before turning to a qualitative discourse-analytic approach, which forms the core of the analysis. The results are discussed with reference to the fields of typology and cross-linguistic research. The analysed texts bring to the fore the necessity of distinguis...
Theoretical claims about typologically constrained differences in how speakers habitually describe p...
Romance languages differ from other Indo-European languages (e.g. Germanic languages) in the express...
Abstract - This article reports on a study that investigated the description of motion events in nar...
This paper investigates the lexical choices made by speakers of Ladin in describing the opening scen...
This article shows how deixis and motion events prove to be ideal topics in the stimulation of refle...
Motion-event typology has moved into a “post-Talmian” terrain of approaches focusing on an open-ende...
This chapter illustrates the benefits of applying insights from language typologies in order to affo...
Crosslinguistic studies of expressions of motion events have found that Talmy's binary typology of v...
When classifying motion events, speakers classify motion in language-specific ways. In the followi...
The contribution is devoted to the lexicalization strategies of intransitive motion events in the ac...
This study aimed to reveal the bidirectional crosslinguistic effect between L1 and L2 in description...
The article addresses the lexicalization of motion and space in the verb lexicons of Danish, French,...
Romance languages have been classified as verb-framed languages in Talmy’s typology (1991, 2000). Ho...
In this paper, we show that variation in motion event encoding displayed by languages with respect t...
Languages differ in the ways they divide the world. This study applies cluster analysis to understan...
Theoretical claims about typologically constrained differences in how speakers habitually describe p...
Romance languages differ from other Indo-European languages (e.g. Germanic languages) in the express...
Abstract - This article reports on a study that investigated the description of motion events in nar...
This paper investigates the lexical choices made by speakers of Ladin in describing the opening scen...
This article shows how deixis and motion events prove to be ideal topics in the stimulation of refle...
Motion-event typology has moved into a “post-Talmian” terrain of approaches focusing on an open-ende...
This chapter illustrates the benefits of applying insights from language typologies in order to affo...
Crosslinguistic studies of expressions of motion events have found that Talmy's binary typology of v...
When classifying motion events, speakers classify motion in language-specific ways. In the followi...
The contribution is devoted to the lexicalization strategies of intransitive motion events in the ac...
This study aimed to reveal the bidirectional crosslinguistic effect between L1 and L2 in description...
The article addresses the lexicalization of motion and space in the verb lexicons of Danish, French,...
Romance languages have been classified as verb-framed languages in Talmy’s typology (1991, 2000). Ho...
In this paper, we show that variation in motion event encoding displayed by languages with respect t...
Languages differ in the ways they divide the world. This study applies cluster analysis to understan...
Theoretical claims about typologically constrained differences in how speakers habitually describe p...
Romance languages differ from other Indo-European languages (e.g. Germanic languages) in the express...
Abstract - This article reports on a study that investigated the description of motion events in nar...