The last four decades have seen huge progress in the description and analysis of cross-linguistic diversity in the encoding of motion (Talmy 1985, 1991, Slobin 1996, 2004). Comparisons between satellite-framed and verb-framed languages suggest that satellite-framed languages typically have a larger manner of motion verb lexicon (swim, dash), while verb-framed languages typically have a larger path of motion verb lexicon (enter, cross) (Slobin 2004, Verkerk 2013, 2014b). This paper investigates how differences between the motion verb lexicons of satellite-framed and verb-framed languages emerge. Phylogenetic comparative methods adopted from biology and an etymological study are used to investigate manner verb lexicons and path verb lexicons ...
International audienceAfter a wealth of studies on motion event descriptions, it seems hard to say s...
English, and a variety of Germanic languages, allow constructions such as the bottle floated into th...
Motion event encoding and the size of the path verb lexicon The correlation between motion event enc...
The last four decades have seen huge progress in the description and analysis of cross-linguistic di...
There have been opposing views on the possibility of a relationship between motion event encoding an...
In recent decades, much has been discovered about the different ways in which people can talk about ...
Languages differ in their ways of encoding semantic aspects of motion events. In Spanish, for instan...
Languages differ systematically in how they map path and manner of motion onto lexical and grammatic...
Motions verbs differ across languages in respect of spatial relations and syntactic/semantic concept...
Crosslinguistic studies of expressions of motion events have found that Talmy's binary typology of v...
typological categories “on the basis of where they characteristically express the schematic core of ...
Languages differ considerably in the attention that they pay to manner as a dimension of motion even...
There are many different syntactic constructions that languages can use to encode motion events. In ...
Different languages express manner and path of motion in distinct ways. Some languages, such as Engl...
This article discusses the ways Finnish and Estonian speakers express the beginning and end of path ...
International audienceAfter a wealth of studies on motion event descriptions, it seems hard to say s...
English, and a variety of Germanic languages, allow constructions such as the bottle floated into th...
Motion event encoding and the size of the path verb lexicon The correlation between motion event enc...
The last four decades have seen huge progress in the description and analysis of cross-linguistic di...
There have been opposing views on the possibility of a relationship between motion event encoding an...
In recent decades, much has been discovered about the different ways in which people can talk about ...
Languages differ in their ways of encoding semantic aspects of motion events. In Spanish, for instan...
Languages differ systematically in how they map path and manner of motion onto lexical and grammatic...
Motions verbs differ across languages in respect of spatial relations and syntactic/semantic concept...
Crosslinguistic studies of expressions of motion events have found that Talmy's binary typology of v...
typological categories “on the basis of where they characteristically express the schematic core of ...
Languages differ considerably in the attention that they pay to manner as a dimension of motion even...
There are many different syntactic constructions that languages can use to encode motion events. In ...
Different languages express manner and path of motion in distinct ways. Some languages, such as Engl...
This article discusses the ways Finnish and Estonian speakers express the beginning and end of path ...
International audienceAfter a wealth of studies on motion event descriptions, it seems hard to say s...
English, and a variety of Germanic languages, allow constructions such as the bottle floated into th...
Motion event encoding and the size of the path verb lexicon The correlation between motion event enc...