The communicative mind
In: Cognitive semiotics, Band 7, Heft 1, S. 144-147
ISSN: 2235-2066
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In: Cognitive semiotics, Band 7, Heft 1, S. 144-147
ISSN: 2235-2066
In: Phenomenology and the cognitive sciences, Band 13, Heft 3, S. 395-418
ISSN: 1572-8676
In: Advances in Interaction Studies v.12
This book brings together authors who are at the forefront of evolutionary linguistics, which challenge the notion that pantomime is merely a fallback mode of expression. This work attempts to unveil the role that pantomime plays in human communication.
In: Cognitive semiotics, Band 11, Heft 2
ISSN: 2235-2066
AbstractLeonard Talmy's influential binary motion event typology has encountered four main challenges: (a) additional language types; (b) extensive "type-internal" variation; (c) the role of other relevant form classes than verbs and "satellites;" and (d) alternative definitions of key semantic concepts like Motion, Path and Manner. After reviewing these issues, we show that the theory ofHolistic Spatial Semanticsprovides analytical tools for their resolution. In support, we present an analysis of motion event descriptions by speakers of two languages that are troublesome for the original typology: Thai (Tai-Kadai) and Telugu (Dravidian), based on the Frog-story elicitation procedure. Despite some apparently similar typological features, the motion event descriptions in the two languages were found to be significantly different. The Telugu participants used very few verbs in contrast to extensive case marking to express Path and nominals to express Region and Landmark, while the Thai speakers relied largely on serial verbs for expressing Path and on prepositions for expressing Region. Combined with previous research in the field, our findings imply (at least) four different clusters of languages in motion event typology with Telugu and Thai as representative of two such clusters, languages like French and Spanish representing a third cluster, and Swedish and English a fourth. This also implies that many other languages like Italian, Bulgarian, and Basque will appear as "mixed languages," positioned between two or three of these clusters.