This study explores children’s encoding of novel verbs referring to motion events, and finds influence of both language-specific and universal constraints on meaning. Motion verbs fall into two categories—manner verbs encode how a movement happens (run, swim), and path verbs encode the starting and ending point of a motion (enter, fall). Some languages express path more frequently in the verb (Spanish, Hebrew), and others manner more frequently (English, German). Our study expands on this previous work demonstrating sensitivity to these language-specific distributions, as well as expanding to test environmental factors representing a predictable universal distribution. We find that children are sensitive to both the language-specific factor...
When classifying motion events, speakers classify motion in language-specific ways. In the followi...
Theoretical claims about typologically constrained differences in how speakers habitually describe p...
Languages differ in how they package the components of an event into words to form sentences. For ex...
This study explores children’s encoding of novel verbs referring to motion events, and finds influen...
Any event includes countless components, giving the learner many possible options in mapping verb me...
Languages encode motion in strikingly different ways. Languages such as English communicate the mann...
Recent studies in language acquisition have paid much attention to linguistic diversity and have beg...
Most English descriptions of motion events express manner in the main verb and path in a preposition...
Recent studies in language acquisition have paid much attention to linguis-tic diversity and have be...
Languages vary strikingly in how they encode motion events. In some languages (e.g. English), manner...
Motions verbs differ across languages in respect of spatial relations and syntactic/semantic concept...
Different languages map semantic elements of spatial relations onto different lexical and syntactic ...
Speakers of English habitually encode motion events using manner-of-motion verbs (e.g., spin, roll, ...
Studies show cross-linguistic differences in motion event encoding, such that English speakers prefe...
English and Korean differ in how they lexicalize the components of motionevents. English characteris...
When classifying motion events, speakers classify motion in language-specific ways. In the followi...
Theoretical claims about typologically constrained differences in how speakers habitually describe p...
Languages differ in how they package the components of an event into words to form sentences. For ex...
This study explores children’s encoding of novel verbs referring to motion events, and finds influen...
Any event includes countless components, giving the learner many possible options in mapping verb me...
Languages encode motion in strikingly different ways. Languages such as English communicate the mann...
Recent studies in language acquisition have paid much attention to linguistic diversity and have beg...
Most English descriptions of motion events express manner in the main verb and path in a preposition...
Recent studies in language acquisition have paid much attention to linguis-tic diversity and have be...
Languages vary strikingly in how they encode motion events. In some languages (e.g. English), manner...
Motions verbs differ across languages in respect of spatial relations and syntactic/semantic concept...
Different languages map semantic elements of spatial relations onto different lexical and syntactic ...
Speakers of English habitually encode motion events using manner-of-motion verbs (e.g., spin, roll, ...
Studies show cross-linguistic differences in motion event encoding, such that English speakers prefe...
English and Korean differ in how they lexicalize the components of motionevents. English characteris...
When classifying motion events, speakers classify motion in language-specific ways. In the followi...
Theoretical claims about typologically constrained differences in how speakers habitually describe p...
Languages differ in how they package the components of an event into words to form sentences. For ex...