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From ‘No, she does’ to ‘Yes, she does’: Negation processing in negative yes–no questions by Chinese users of English ...
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Mental simulation of the illusory and the factual in negation processing ...
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Towards a credibility revolution in bilingualism research : Open data and materials as stepping stones to more reproducible and replicable research
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Crosslinguistic influence on English and Chinese L2 speakers’ conceptualization of event serialization patterns
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Crosslinguistic influence on English and Chinese L2 speakers’ conceptualization of event series ...
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Crosslinguistic influence on English and Chinese L2 speakers’ conceptualization of event series ...
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chl2serialisation – Research Data for Crosslinguistic influence on English and Chinese L2 speakers’ conceptualization of event series ...
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chl2serialisation – Research Data for Crosslinguistic influence on English and Chinese L2 speakers’ conceptualization of event series ...
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enl2serialisation – Research Data for Crosslinguistic influence on English and Chinese L2 speakers’ conceptualization of event series ...
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enl2serialisation – Research Data for Crosslinguistic influence on English and Chinese L2 speakers’ conceptualization of event series ...
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Changing event phase categorisation in second language users through perceptual learning ...
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Changing Event Categorisation in Second Language Users Through Perceptual Learning
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Defying chronology: : Crosslinguistic variation in reverse order reports
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Abstract:
Much of how we sequence events in speech mirrors the order of their natural occurrence. While event chains that conform to chronology may be easier to process, languages offer substantial freedom to manipulate temporal order. This article explores to what extent digressions from chronology are attributable to differences in grammatical aspect systems. We compared reverse order reports (RORs) in event descriptions elicited from native speakers of four languages, two with (Spanish, Modern Standard Arabic [MSA]) and two without grammatical aspect (German, Hungarian). In the Arabic group, all participants were highly competent MSA speakers from Palestine and Jordan. Standardized frequency counts showed significantly more RORs expressed by non-aspect groups than by aspect groups. Adherence to chronology changing as a function of contrast in grammatical aspect signal that languages without obligatory marking of ongoingness may provide more flexibility for event reordering. These findings bring novel insights about the dynamic interplay between language structure and temporal sequencing in the discourse stream.
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URL: https://doi.org/10.1515/ling-2019-0006 https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/142429/ https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/142429/1/Vanek_Mertins2019_AuthorsCopy.pdf
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Special Issue : Tense, Aspect, and Modality in L2 (TAML2)
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In: ISSN: 0019-042X ; EISSN: 1613-4141 ; International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02133196 ; International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching, 55 (3), pp.221-345, 2017 (2017)
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Covariation between temporal interlanguage features and nonverbal event categorisation
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‘It starts to explode.’ Phasal segmentation of contextualised events in L2 English
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Facilitative effects of learner-directed codeswitching : Evidence from Chinese learners of English
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