In:Space and Time in Languages and Cultures: Linguistic diversity
Edited by Luna Filipović and Katarzyna M. Jaszczolt
[Human Cognitive Processing 36] 2012
► pp. v–viii
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Published online: 24 July 2012
https://doi.org/10.1075/hcp.36.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/hcp.36.toc
Table of contents
Editors and contributors
Foreword: Space and time in languages, cultures, and cognition
Introduction: Linguistic diversity in the spatio-temporal domain
I. Representing location in space and time
1. Spatial relations in Hinuq and Bezhta
2. Pragmatically disambiguating space: Experimental and cross-linguistic evidence
3. The semantics of the perfect progressive in English
4. Drowning “into” the river in North Sámi: Uses of the illative
5. Cross-linguistic differences in expressing time and universal principles of utterance interpretation
6. Modelling temporal reasoning: Aspectual interaction in determiners, adverbs, and dialogue
7. Language-specific perspectives in reference to time in the discourse of Czech, English, and Hungarian speakers
8. More than “time”: The grammaticalisation of the German tense system and ‘frame of reference’ as a crucial interface between space and time
II. Space and time in language acquisition
9. L2 acquisition of tense-aspect morphology: Lexical aspect, morphological regularity, and transfer
10. Motion events in Japanese and English: Does learning a second language change the way you view the world?
11. ‘He walked up the pole with arms and legs’: Typology in second language acquisition
12. Caused motion events across languages and learner types: A comparison of bilingual first and adult second language acquisition
13. Spatial prepositions in Italian L2: Universal and language-specific principles
14. Expressing simultaneity using aspect: A comparison of oral productions in French L1, Tunisian Arabic L1, and French L2 by Tunisian learners
III. Dynamic relations in space and time domains
15. Variation in motion events: Theory and applications
16. Italian motion constructions: Different functions of ‘particles’
17. A temporal approach to motion verbs: ‘Come’ and ‘go’ in English and East Asian languages
18. The role of grammar in the conceptualisation of ‘progression’: A comparative analysis of Dutch and Japanese event descriptions
19. The locative PP motion construction in Polish: A third lexicalisation pattern?
20. Path salience in motion descriptions in Jaminjung
Contents of the companion volume: Language, culture, and cognition
Name index
Subject index
Language index
