04507nam 2200661Ia 450 991096921310332120200520144314.097866125587649781282558762128255876597890272886399027288631(CKB)2550000000012156(SSID)ssj0000423953(PQKBManifestationID)11306941(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000423953(PQKBWorkID)10470983(PQKB)10060926(MiAaPQ)EBC623385(Au-PeEL)EBL623385(CaPaEBR)ebr10383973(CaONFJC)MIL255876(OCoLC)642206502(DE-B1597)721415(DE-B1597)9789027288639(EXLCZ)99255000000001215620091023d2010 uy 0engurcn|||||||||txtccrNew approaches to Slavic verbs of motion /edited by Victoria Hasko, Renee Perelmutter1st ed.Philadelphia, PA John Benjamins2010x, 392 pStudies in language companion series,0165-7763 ;115Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph9789027205827 9027205825 Includes bibliographical references and index.Contributors -- Introduction: verbs of motion in Slavic languages: paths for exploration / Victoria Hasko and Renee Perelmutter -- Part I. Diachrony of motion expressions: 1. Clause and text organization in early East Slavic with reference to motion and position expressions / Sarah Turner -- 2. Indeterminate motion verbs are denominal / Johanna Nichols -- 3. Common Slavic 'indeterminate' verbs of motion were really manner-of-motion verbs / Stephen M. Dickey -- 4. PIE inheritance and word-formational innovation in Slavic motion verbs in -i- / Marc L. Greenberg -- Part II. Synchronic approaches to aspect: 5. Perfectives from indeterminate motion verbs in Russian / Laura A. Janda -- 6. Aspects of motion: On the semantics and pragmatics of indeterminate aspect / Olga Kagan -- 7. Verbs of motion under negation in modern Russian / Renee Perelmutter -- Part III. Typological approach to the study of Slavic verbs of motion: 8. Semantic composition of motion verbs in Russian and English: The case of intra-typological variability / Victoria Hasko -- 9. Motion events in Polish: Lexicalization patterns and the description of Manner / Anetta Kopecka -- 10. The importance of being a prefix: Prefixal morphology and the lexicalization of motion events in Serbo-Croatian / Luna Filipović -- 11. Variation in the encoding of endpoints of motion in Russian / Tatiana Nikitina -- 12. Verbs of rotation in Russian and Polish / Ekaterina V. Rakhilina -- 13. Aquamotion verbs in Slavic and Germanic: A case study in lexical typology / Maria Koptjevskaja-Tamm, Dagmar Divjak and Ekaterina Rakhilina -- 14. Metaphorical walking: Russian idti as a generalized motion verb / Tore Nesset -- 15. Russian verbs of motion: Second language acquisition and cognitive linguistics perspectives / Kira Gor ... [et al.].The results of three experiments comparing the processing of verbs of motion by late second language learners, American college students of Russian, and early starters, heritage speakers of Russian, are interpreted within the image-schematic framework developed in cognitive linguistics: the cross-linguistic typological approach introduced by Leonard Talmy (1985, 2000), the extension of this approach to Russian developed by Tore Nesset (2008), and the "thinking for speaking" hypothesis by Dan Slobin (1996). The results of the study support the claim that the system of verbs of motion is not fully acquired even in highly proficient second language learners. They typically lag behind not only native speakers, but also heritage speakers at the same proficiency levels.Studies in language companion series ;115.Slavic languagesVerbMotionTerminologySlavic languagesVerb.Motion491.8/0456Hasko Victoria1801263Perelmutter Renee1801264MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910969213103321New approaches to Slavic verbs of motion4346402UNINA