In:Reference Point and Case: A Cognitive Grammar exploration of Korean
Chongwon Park
[Human Cognitive Processing 68] 2019
► pp. xvii–xviii
Published online: 12 December 2019
https://doi.org/10.1075/hcp.68.lof
https://doi.org/10.1075/hcp.68.lof
List of figures
Figure 2.1Symbolic structure
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Figure 2.2Compositional path
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Figure 2.3Scope illustrated
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Figure 2.4Profiling depicted
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Figure 2.5Trajector/landmark alignment
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Figure 2.6in front of vs. behind
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Figure 2.7Correspondence
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Figure 2.8Elaboration and e-site
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Figure 2.9A diagram for Alice admires Bill
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Figure 2.10Instance conception
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Figure 2.11Grounding illustrated
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Figure 2.12Reference point illustrated
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Figure 2.13Extrinsic vs. intrinsic topics
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Figure 2.14Left-dislocation vs. topic construction
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Figure 3.1Reference point subject creation
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Figure 3.2Complex predicate construction
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Figure 3.3Regular subject composition
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Figure 3.4Double subject construction illustrated
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Figure 3.5Multiple subject construction illustrated
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Figure 3.6Topic marker as a reference point relationship
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Figure 4.1Regular object composition
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Figure 4.2Reference point object creation
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Figure 4.3A full CG description of (4.51)
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Figure 4.4Type–Token MAC
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Figure 5.1The illustration of (5.13)
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Figure 5.2manh-ta ‘many-decl’ vs. iss-ta ‘exist-decl’
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Figure 5.3Illustration of (5.16)
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Figure 5.4The result of coalescence
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Figure 5.5Blending of the coalesced double nominative construction and the locative schema
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Figure 5.6Metaphorical extension of the exist-type verb
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Figure 5.7Metaphorical extension of (5.18a)
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Figure 5.8Case stacking illustrated
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Figure 6.1Location vs. Setting, redrawn after Langacker (1991: 345)
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Figure 6.2Perfective vs. imperfective
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Figure 6.3Regular- vs. setting-subjects
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Figure 6.4Setting-subject as a reference point
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Figure 6.5The integration of the regular subject
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Figure 6.6Location object
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Figure 6.7Location object with a transitive verb
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Figure 6.8Topicality and (im)perfectivity
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Figure 7.1Multiple senses of yellow
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Figure 7.2A comparison of verbal nouns with nouns and verbs
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Figure 7.3The combination of a verbal noun and ha(y)-
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Figure 7.4The structure of (7.20) depicted
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Figure 7.5Verbal noun modified by one genitive-marked nominal
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Figure 7.6Nominal referent in relation to maximal extension
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Figure 7.7Implicit reference point grounding depicted
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Figure 7.8The CG illustration of (7.32)
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Figure 8.1A schematic structure of SOR
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Figure 8.2English SOR with the expect verb
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Figure 8.3Reference point vs. active-zone/profile discrepancy
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Figure 8.4Korean SOR depicted
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Figure 8.5SOR from a finite clause
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Figure 8.6Multiple Subject Construction
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Figure 8.7The CG diagram for (8.39)
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Figure 8.8Extrinsic vs. intrinsic reference point
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Figure 8.9Pivot as a reference point in a relative clause
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Figure 9.1Information flow
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Figure 9.2Structure for (9.7)
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Figure 9.3Structure for (9.9)
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Figure 9.4-kkeyse as a postposition
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Figure 9.5The derivation of nom-nom stacking
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Figure 9.6A plain -kkeyse-marked subject in a sentence
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Figure 9.7NNS illustrated
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Figure 9.8NNS with the intervening -man illustrated
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Figure 9.9The delimiter -to ‘COR’ illustrated
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