Review published In: International Journal of Chinese Linguistics
Vol. 5:2 (2018) ► pp.331–339
Book review
Aneta Pavlenko. 2014. The bilingual mind and what it tells us about language and thought
Reviewed by
Published online: 13 December 2018
https://doi.org/10.1075/ijchl.00004.wan
https://doi.org/10.1075/ijchl.00004.wan
References (12)
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(2004). The many ways to search for a frog: Linguistic typology and the expression of motion events. In Strömqvist, S. & L. Verhoeven (eds.), Relating events in narrative: Typological and contextual perspectives (pp. 219–257). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.
(2006). What makes manner of motion salient? Explorations in linguistic typology, discourse, and cognition. In Hickmann, M. & S. Robert (eds.), Space in languages: Linguistic systems and cognitive categories (pp. 59–81). Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
Talmy, L. (1985). Lexicalization patterns: Semantic structure in lexical forms. In Shopen, T. (ed.), Language typology and syntactic description, vol. 3 Grammatical categories and the lexicon (pp. 57–149). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
(1991). Path to realization: A typology of event conflation. Proceedings of the Seventeenth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistic Society (pp. 480–519). Berkeley Linguistics Society.
