Article published In: Studies in Language
Vol. 26:1 (2002) ► pp.165–180
Japanese enter/exit verbs revisited
A reply to Kita (1999)
Published online: 21 June 2002
https://doi.org/10.1075/sl.26.1.06tsu
https://doi.org/10.1075/sl.26.1.06tsu
Kita (1999) compares Japanese and English Enter/Exit verbs in spatial expressions, and argues that Japanese Enter/Exit verbs lack semantic encoding of motion. He claims that this runs counter to the view which considers motion and location to be primitives in the semantics of spatial expressions; instead, he proposes that discrete change of state should be included in the set of primitives. In this reply,I will first show that Kita’s evidence does not support lack of motion in Japanese Enter/Exit verbs, but that instead these verbs do pattern with motion verbs in the language, where conflation of motion is not disputable. I finally demonstrate that Kita’s claim about change of state may be well taken, but it should be put in a larger context of regular polysemy.
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Cited by five other publications
Nagano, Tomonori
2015.
Acquisition of English verb transitivity by native speakers of Japanese
. Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism 5:3 ► pp. 322 ff.
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BROWN, AMANDA & MARIANNE GULLBERG
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