A vast amount of research has been carried out inspired by the motion event typology established by Talmy (1985, 2000), that of, verb-framed and satellite framed languages. However, hardly any research has been devoted to either deeply analyse motion verb lexicons or to explore manner-of-motion verb granularity between languages typologically different or similar (cf. Slobin, 2003, 2006). This paper concentrates on an important subdomain of motion, i.e., human locomotion, and examines the way Spanish and English lexicalise it in verbs. The first part of the paper focuses on the semantics of human locomotion verbs with special attention to the sort of fine-grained manner information that each language encodes. In the second part, an empiri...
The last four decades have seen huge progress in the description and analysis of cross-linguistic di...
This paper examines some semantics aspects of Arabic motion verbs compared to their English counterp...
This paper examines some semantics aspects of Arabic motion verbs compared to their English counterp...
A vast amount of research has been carried out inspired by the motion event typology established by ...
A vast amount of research has been carried out inspired by the motion event typology established by ...
Crosslinguistic studies of expressions of motion events have found that Talmy's binary typology of v...
Native speakers of different languages may conflate reality in different ways. One of the most illus...
Manners of human gait: a crosslinguistic event-naming study Abstract: Crosslinguistic studies of exp...
Native speakers of different languages may conflate reality in different ways. One of the most illus...
It has been argued that real-world structure constrains the semantic representations of verbs, resul...
Crosslinguistic studies of expressions of motion events have found that Talmy's binary typology of v...
Talmy (1975; 1985) proposes that most of the world's languages can be divided into two classes regar...
Talmy (1975; 1985) proposes that most of the world's languages can be divided into two classes regar...
Motions verbs differ across languages in respect of spatial relations and syntactic/semantic concept...
Speakers of English habitually encode motion events using manner-of-motion verbs (e.g., spin, roll, ...
The last four decades have seen huge progress in the description and analysis of cross-linguistic di...
This paper examines some semantics aspects of Arabic motion verbs compared to their English counterp...
This paper examines some semantics aspects of Arabic motion verbs compared to their English counterp...
A vast amount of research has been carried out inspired by the motion event typology established by ...
A vast amount of research has been carried out inspired by the motion event typology established by ...
Crosslinguistic studies of expressions of motion events have found that Talmy's binary typology of v...
Native speakers of different languages may conflate reality in different ways. One of the most illus...
Manners of human gait: a crosslinguistic event-naming study Abstract: Crosslinguistic studies of exp...
Native speakers of different languages may conflate reality in different ways. One of the most illus...
It has been argued that real-world structure constrains the semantic representations of verbs, resul...
Crosslinguistic studies of expressions of motion events have found that Talmy's binary typology of v...
Talmy (1975; 1985) proposes that most of the world's languages can be divided into two classes regar...
Talmy (1975; 1985) proposes that most of the world's languages can be divided into two classes regar...
Motions verbs differ across languages in respect of spatial relations and syntactic/semantic concept...
Speakers of English habitually encode motion events using manner-of-motion verbs (e.g., spin, roll, ...
The last four decades have seen huge progress in the description and analysis of cross-linguistic di...
This paper examines some semantics aspects of Arabic motion verbs compared to their English counterp...
This paper examines some semantics aspects of Arabic motion verbs compared to their English counterp...