In:Converging Evidence: Methodological and theoretical issues for linguistic research
Edited by Doris Schönefeld
[Human Cognitive Processing 33] 2011
► pp. v–vi
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Published online: 30 November 2011
https://doi.org/10.1075/hcp.33.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/hcp.33.toc
Table of contents
Contributors
Preface
Introduction: On evidence and the convergence of evidence in linguistic research
Issues in collecting converging evidence: Is metaphor always a matter of thought?
Part 1. Multi-methodological approaches to constructional and idiomatic meaning
1.1. Cognition verb constructions
Perception and conception: The ‘see x to be y’ construction from a cognitive perspective
Explaining diverging evidence: The case of clause-initial I think
1.2. Constructional alternatives
I am about to die vs. I am going to die: A usage-based comparison between two future-indicating constructions
Studying syntactic priming in corpora: Implications of different levels of granularity
Islands of (im)productivity in corpus data and acceptability judgments: Contrasting two potentiality constructions in Dutch
1.3. Idioms and creative language use
Compositional and embodied meanings of somatisms: A corpus-based approach to phraseologisms
Word-formation patterns in a cross-linguistic perspective: Testing predictions for novel object naming in Hungarian and German
Part 2. Multi-methodological approaches to language acquisition
The interaction of function and input frequency in L1-acquisition: The case of was...für ‘what kind of...’ questions in German
Relative clause acquisition and representation: Evidence from spontaneous speech, sentence repetition, and comprehension
Converging evidence in the typology of motion events: A corpus-based approach to interlanguage
Part 3. Multi-methodological approaches to the study of discourse
Differences in the use of emotion metaphors in expert-lay communication: Converging evidence from two complementary studies
Index
