Search results for "verb"

showing 10 items of 1089 documents

Microvariation in the Distribution of Resumptive Pronouns in the Left Dislocation Construction in Two Tyrolean Dialects of Northern Italy

2023

In this paper we document a so-far neglected case of microvariation involving resumptive pronouns in the left-dislocation construction in Meranese, spoken in South Tyrol, and Mòcheno, spoken in the Fersina valley (Trentino). While in standard German resumptive elements in this construction belong to the class of D-pronouns, the two Tyrolean dialects considered in the paper exhibit, as resumptive pronouns, both (i) D-pronouns and (ii) pronominal usages of the distal demonstrative formed by the definite article (D) and sèll corresponding to ‘that one’. We show that in both languages D+sèll forms overlap with German D-pronouns in most contexts, whereas D-pronou…

Linguistics and LanguageLinksversetzung; D-pronoun; demonstrative; subject clitic; Verb third (V3) word order; Verb second (V2)demonstrativeLinksversetzungVerb third (V3) word orderSettore L-LIN/14 - Lingua E Traduzione - Lingua Tedescasubject cliticVerb second (V2)D-pronounLanguage and Linguistics<i>Linksversetzung</i>; D-pronoun; demonstrative; subject clitic; Verb third (V3) word order; Verb second (V2)Settore L-LIN/01 - Glottologia E LinguisticaLanguages; Volume 8; Issue 2; Pages: 91
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Revisión de la categoría «adverbio» en español

2009

Among all word classes, the adverb is the worst defined and studied grammatical category. All grammarians accept that this category includes very heterogeneous elements, which come from very different origins and have very different functions. There is thus an urgent need to review this grammatical category. With this work, I intend to find an answer to the following questions: How the grammatical theory on the adverb has been developed? Which have been the mistakes of the grammatical tradition by producing a theory on the adverb? What should we actually understand by an adverb? How can we order, in a proper and reasonable way, the elements which are presently grouped in the so called «adve…

Linguistics and LanguageLiterature and Literary TheoryGrammargramáticaadverbiomedia_common.quotation_subjectGrammar; Adverb; CategorizationcategorizaciónGrammatical categoryP1-1091AdverbPart of speechgramática; adverbio; categorizaciónLanguage and LinguisticsLinguisticsCategorizationPsychologyPhilology. LinguisticsWord (group theory)Adverbialmedia_commonRevista de Filología Española
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Fingimientos y atenuación en el uso de "creo"

2018

The article analyses the development of attenuation functions in different uses of creo in colloquial conversations. This propositional attitude verb, the most polysemic and polyfunctional one in its category, has been traditionally considered an attenuating device because it can be used by speakers to convey distancing from their message. However, the fact that it is a subjectifier in its first person form could be understood as a contradiction with its function being primarily attenuating. This paper explores the semantic and pragmatic values of the different uses of creo in order to determine what triggers attenuation. 215 examples from two conversational corpora, VAL.ES.CO. 2002 and VAL…

Linguistics and LanguageLiterature and Literary TheoryPropositional attitudeComputer scienceFirst personDistancingmedia_common.quotation_subjectContradictionVerbFunction (engineering)Language and LinguisticsLinguisticsmedia_commonRilce. Revista de Filología Hispánica
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How an idea germinates into a projext or the intransitive resultative construction with Entity-Specific change-of-state verbs

2014

[EN] This study discusses how seven of Levin’s (1993) entity-specific change-of-state verbs (i.e. bloom, blossom, flower, germinate, sprout, swell, and blister) are subsumed into the intransitive resultative construction by highlighting and making use of the external and internal constraints proposed by the Lexical Constructional Model (LCM; Ruiz de Mendoza and Mairal 2007). External constraints refer to cognitive mechanisms such as high-level metaphor and/or metonymy whereas internal constraints are concerned with the encyclopedic and event structure makeup of verbs. The Internal Variable Conditioning constraint is at work when the information encapsulated by a predicate determines the cho…

Linguistics and LanguageMetonymyMetaphorKeywords: entity-specific change-of-state verbsmedia_common.quotation_subjectVerbLanguage and LinguisticsPredicate (grammar)Linguisticsthe Internal Variable Conditioning constraint.lcsh:Philology. LinguisticsIntransitive resultative constructionEvent structureThe Internal Variable Conditioning constraintlcsh:P1-1091ResultativeInternal variableEntity-specific change-of-state verbsLexical Constructional ModelExternal and internal constraintsmedia_commonMathematicsLlenguatge i llengües
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“But big is a funny word”: a multiple perspective on concept formation in a foreign-language-mediated classroom

2015

In recent years, foreign-language mediated instruction (immersion, content-based language learning and teaching) has been studied from various perspectives. In the following study, a single event from a Finnish third-grade EFL-mediated geography lesson is studied by combining insights from three research approaches: sociocultural, socio-cognitive, and discourse-pragmatic. The data analysis focuses on how during concept formation, the participants use commonplace means present in every classroom – textbook and chalkboard, spoken and written, verbal and nonverbal communicative means – to construct knowledge and its social context. The results indicate that there exist strong parallels among t…

Linguistics and LanguageNonverbal communicationConcept learningForeign languageSocio-cognitiveLanguage acquisitionSociocultural evolutionPsychologyParallelsLanguage and LinguisticsLinguisticsSocial relationEducationJournal of Applied Linguistics and Professional Practice
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Bene: Adverb or noun?

2013

When Italian bene ‘good / well’ occurs with fare ‘do / make’, several constructs with remarkably different argument frames are involved. This paper deals with three of them: (a) Il latte fa bene ai bambini ‘Milk is good for children’; (b) Fa bene il suo lavoro ‘She does her job well’, and (c) Faresti bene a non dire niente ‘You would do well to say nothing about it’. We discuss dictionary discrepancies concerning the lexical category of bene in (a), which we take to be a noun predicate, and draw a distinction between the adverbial uses in (b) and (c).

Linguistics and LanguageNothingNounPhilosophyAdverbPart of speechPredicate (grammar)AdverbialLinguisticsLexicographyAdverbes et compléments adverbiaux / Adverbs and adverbial complements
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The effects of narrative context on French verbal inflections: A developmental perspective

1993

This experiment examines how narrative context affects French subjects' selection of past imperfective (imparfait) vs. perfective inflections with different predicate types. Adults and 10-year-old children were asked to inflect verbs presented in their written infinitive form in two conditions: (a) in isolated sentences; (b) embedded in the beginning, middle, or end of narratives. Regardless of conditions, the adults rarely used theimparfait with punctual resultative predicates. In both conditions, the frequency ofimparfait was high with durative predicates, particularly with aresultative ones, but it varied with position in the narratives, being highest at the beginning and lowest at the e…

Linguistics and LanguagePerfective aspectExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyVerbLanguage and LinguisticsPsycholinguisticsPredicate (grammar)LinguisticsLanguage developmentResultativeNarrativeInfinitivePsychologyGeneral PsychologyJournal of Psycholinguistic Research
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The zoom-on-possessee construction in Kam (Dong): the anatomy of a new construction type

2005

Kam, a Kadai language spoken in Guizhou province (People's Republic of China), has a family of intransitive possessive constructions with the word order ‘Possessor–Verb–Possessee’. (The basic word order in Kam is SV and AVO.) While two recent papers have featured this unique construction type for an array of other Southeast Asian languages, they fail to acknowledge its distinct semantic value in contrast to the related construction type ‘Possessee–Possessor–Verb’. The former construction type displays a so-called ‘zoom-effect’: the possessor is predicated IN, AT or THROUGH his/her/its possessee; the predication zooms from the possessor on his/her/its possessee. The latter construction, in c…

Linguistics and LanguagePhilosophySemantic role labelingComputer scienceDative caseVerbLocative caseSoutheast asianPossessiveLanguage and LinguisticsLinguisticsPredicate (grammar)Word orderJournal of Linguistics
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Exploring the nature of the ‘subject’-preference: Evidence from the online comprehension of simple sentences in Mandarin Chinese

2009

In two visual ERP studies, we investigated whether Mandarin Chinese shows a subject-preference in spite of the controversial status of grammatical relations in this language. We compared ERP responses at the position of the verb and the second NP in object-verb-subject (OVS) and subject-verb-object (SVO) structures. While SVO is the basic word order in Chinese and OV with subject-drop is possible, OVS is strongly dispreferred. At the position of the verb, which disambiguated towards an object or a subject reading of NP1, Experiment 1 revealed an N400 for both subject-initial control conditions in comparison with the critical object-initial condition. Experiment 2 showed that this result was…

Linguistics and LanguagePhrase3205 Experimental and Cognitive PsychologyObject (grammar)410 LinguisticsExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyVerb10104 Department of Comparative LinguisticsMandarin ChineseLanguage and Linguisticslanguage.human_languageLinguisticsEducation3310 Linguistics and Language490 Other languagesSubject (grammar)language890 Other literaturesPsychologyControl (linguistics)1203 Language and LinguisticsSentence3304 EducationWord orderLanguage and Cognitive Processes
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&lt;i&gt;Cuesta arriba e por llano&lt;/i&gt;: The development of “postpositions” in Spanish and Catalan

2005

In this article we analyze the formation of Spanish and Catalan phrases with an intransitive locative adverb preceded by a bare noun. These constructions can have a meaning of path and direction (i. e. Sp. rio abajo, Cat. riu avall ‘downriver’) as well as body orientation (i. e. Sp. cara abajo, Cat. cara avall ‘face down’). A detailed analysis of the available historical documentation suggests the hypothesis that these constructions derive from more complex expressions headed by a preposition that lost its phonological properties, without losing its semantic and syntactic features. The presence of a phonologically null preposition is licensed both by the meaning of the incorporated noun and…

Linguistics and LanguagePhraseLocative adverbHistoryFace (sociological concept)AdverbLanguage and Linguisticslanguage.human_languageLinguisticsNounlanguageCatalanPredicative expressionMeaning (linguistics)Journal of Portuguese Linguistics
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