Article published In: Review of Cognitive Linguistics
Vol. 8:2 (2010) ► pp.233–271
The semantics of the English and the Spanish motion verb lexicons
Published online: 28 October 2010
https://doi.org/10.1075/rcl.8.2.01cif
https://doi.org/10.1075/rcl.8.2.01cif
Talmy’s (e.g., 1985, 2000) seminal work has engendered a great deal of research and debate in the literature on motion event descriptions over the last decades. Despite the vast amount of research on the linguistic expression of motion events, the fact that motion verb roots might encode information apart from Path and Manner of motion is often overlooked. The present paper addresses the semantics of 376 English and 257 Spanish motion verbs by exploring the general conflations which are conveyed by these verbs. In this regard, both crosslinguistic similarities and differences will be pointed out. My research concludes that path-conflating and manner-conflating verbs amount to the largest part of their lexicons but that other minor patterns such as ground conflations, in contradiction to Talmy’s speculations on the lack of ground-conflating verbs, are present as well. Taken as a whole, this paper provides a rich and detailed account on the semantic nature of the English and the Spanish motion verb lexicons, and emerges as a helpful reference for researchers in this field.
Keywords: motion verbs, English, conflation patterns, Spanish
Cited by (26)
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[no author supplied]
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