In:Motion and Space across Languages: Theory and applications
Edited by Iraide Ibarretxe-Antuñano
[Human Cognitive Processing 59] 2017
► pp. vii–x
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Published online: 14 August 2017
https://doi.org/10.1075/hcp.59.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/hcp.59.toc
Table of contents
Editor and contributors
xi
Foreword. The past, present, and future of motion research
1
Leonard Talmy
Introduction. Motion and semantic typology: A hot old topic with exciting new caveats
13
Iraide Ibarretxe-Antuñano
Part I.Delving into motion event typology
Chapter 1.The typology of manner expressions: A preliminary look
39
Kimi Akita
Chapter 2.Expressing and categorizing motion in French and English: Verbal and non-verbal cognition across languages
61
Maya Hickmann
Helen Engemann
Efstathia Soroli
Henriëtte Hendriks
Coralie Vincent
Chapter 3.The functional nature of deictic verbs and the coding patterns of Deixis: An experimental study in English, Japanese, and Thai
95
Yo Matsumoto
Kimi Akita
Kiyoko Takahashi
Chapter 4.The importance of minority languages in semantic typology: The case of Aragonese and Catalan
123
Iraide Ibarretxe-Antuñano
Alberto Hijazo-Gascón
María Teresa Moret-Oliver
Chapter 5.
Latin to Ancient Italian motion constructions: A complex typological shift
151
Monica Mosca
Chapter 6.The early life of borrowed path verbs in English
177
Judith Huber
Chapter 7.Non-actual motion in language and experience
205
Johan Blomberg
Chapter 8.Metaphorical motion constructions in specialized genres
229
Rosario Caballero
Part II.Expanding motion event typology
Chapter 9.
Crossing the road or crossing the mind: How differently do we move across physical and metaphorical spaces in speech or in gesture?
257
Şeyda Özçalışkan
Lauren J. Stites
Samantha N. Emerson
Chapter 10.Thinking for speaking about motion in a second language: Looking back and forward
279
Teresa Cadierno
Chapter 11.Motion event contrasts in Romance languages: Deixis in Spanish as a second language
301
Alberto Hijazo-Gascón
Chapter 12.Verb-framed, satellite-framed or in between? A L2 learner’s thinking for speaking in her L1 and L2 over 14 years
329
Gale Stam
Chapter 13.On the reception of translations: Exploring the impact of typological differences on legal contexts
367
Ana Rojo
Paula Cifuentes-Férez
Chapter 14.
Applied language typology: Practical applications of research on typological contrasts between languages
399
Luna Filipović
Afterword. Typologies and language use
419
Dan I. Slobin
Name index
447
Subject index
453
Language index
459
