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1
How children express caused motion events in Chinese and English: universal and language-specific influences
In: Lingua <Amsterdam>. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Elsevier 121 (2011) 12, 1796-1819
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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2
The expression of caused motion events in Chinese and in English: some typological issues
In: Linguistics. - Berlin [u.a.] : Mouton de Gruyter 49 (2011) 5, 1041-1077
BLLDB
OLC Linguistik
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3
Motion expressions in Chinese and English : a typological perspective
In: Space in language (Pisa, 2011), p. 533-542
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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4
The expression of caused motion events in Chinese and in English: some typological issues
In: ISSN: 0024-3949 ; EISSN: 1613-396X ; Linguistics ; https://hal-univ-paris8.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01020804 ; Linguistics, De Gruyter, 2011, pp.1041-1076 (2011)
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5
La représentation de l’espace : études expérimentales et translinguistiques : manuel de codage; 2 volumes
Hickmann, Maya; Hendriks, Henriëtte; Demagny, Annie-Claude. - : HAL CCSD, 2011. : Laboratoire Structures Formelles du langage, CNRS & Université de Paris VIII, 2011
In: https://hal-univ-paris.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01247811 ; Laboratoire Structures Formelles du langage, CNRS & Université de Paris VIII, 2011 (2011)
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6
Space and language typology: does one shoe fit all?
In: Colloque international : "Space and Time across Languages, Disciplines and Cultures" ; https://hal-univ-paris.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01247645 ; Colloque international : "Space and Time across Languages, Disciplines and Cultures", Apr 2010, Cambridge, United Kingdom ; http://archive.sfl.cnrs.fr/sites/sfl/IMG/pdf/HICK_051110_submitted.pdf (2010)
Abstract: International audience ; Linguistic systems encode spatial information in strikingly different ways. Talmy (2000) classified languages into two families depending on whether they are verb-framed (e.g. Romance) vs. satellite-framed (e.g. Germanic). However, some languages seem harder to fit into these two categories, e.g. serial-verb languages have been described as ‘equipollent’ systems (Slobin 2004), other languages as ‘parallel’ systems. In addition, languages within a given family differ in important respects that may have some implications for typology. The present study examines descriptions of motion events that were elicited in controlled situations across several languages (English, French, Russian, Chinese, Greek) in order to discuss appropriate typological classification for these languages. Results show that the locus of Path information is only one dimension to be taken into account for a proper typological classification of languages and suggest that the typological status of languagesshould be seen as part of a continuum rather than in terms of a dichotomy.
Keyword: [SHS.LANGUE]Humanities and Social Sciences/Linguistics; Chinese; English; French; Greek; Language typology; Russian; Space
URL: https://hal-univ-paris.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01247645
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