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Chuzhdoezikovo Obuchenie-Foreign Language Teaching, 2023
The article presents the cognitive basis of the differentiation and definition of names in word classes. Cognitively analyzed substantivation, qualification and quantification and their circularity explain grammaticalization as a process. Definiteness as a categorical phenomenon of names is a syncretic grammaticalization of a cognitive-perspective ...
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The article presents the cognitive basis of the differentiation and definition of names in word classes. Cognitively analyzed substantivation, qualification and quantification and their circularity explain grammaticalization as a process. Definiteness as a categorical phenomenon of names is a syncretic grammaticalization of a cognitive-perspective ...
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Do non‐verbal number systems shape grammar? Numerical cognition and Number morphology compared [PDF]
Number morphology (e.g., singular vs. plural) is a part of the grammar that captures numerical information. Some languages have morphological Number values, which express few (paucal), two (dual), three (trial) and sometimes (possibly) four (quadral ...
Francesca Franzon +2 more
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2021
Cognitive Grammar (CG), previously known as “space grammar,” is a theory of language within the cognitive linguistics camp developed by Ronald Langacker from the late 1970s onward. Its development can be divided into two stages: “classical” CG—from its inception to the turn of the twenty-first century—and contemporary CG.
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Cognitive Grammar (CG), previously known as “space grammar,” is a theory of language within the cognitive linguistics camp developed by Ronald Langacker from the late 1970s onward. Its development can be divided into two stages: “classical” CG—from its inception to the turn of the twenty-first century—and contemporary CG.
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Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 2005
COGNITIVE GRAMMAR. John R. Taylor. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002. Pp. xii + 621. $29.95 paper. This volume is not aimed at SLA researchers but is a book that SLA researchers interested in usage- and frequency-based models will find valuable.
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COGNITIVE GRAMMAR. John R. Taylor. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002. Pp. xii + 621. $29.95 paper. This volume is not aimed at SLA researchers but is a book that SLA researchers interested in usage- and frequency-based models will find valuable.
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An Introduction to Cognitive Grammar
Cognitive Science, 1986Cognitive grammar takes a nonstandard view of linguistic semantics and grammatical structure. Meaning is equated with conceptualization. Semantic structures are characterized relative to cognitive domains, and derive their value by construing the content of these domains in a specific fashion.
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1995
AbstractThe central goal of Cognitive Grammar (CG) is to describe the structure of particular languages and develop a general framework allowing the optical description of any language. CG is a particular cognitive linguistic theory. Even within cognitive linguistics, it stands out as radical due to certain basic claims, notably that grammar is wholly ...
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AbstractThe central goal of Cognitive Grammar (CG) is to describe the structure of particular languages and develop a general framework allowing the optical description of any language. CG is a particular cognitive linguistic theory. Even within cognitive linguistics, it stands out as radical due to certain basic claims, notably that grammar is wholly ...
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Cognitive grammar and aphasic discourse
Clinical Linguistics & Phonetics, 2016In cognitive grammar (CG), there is no clear division between language and other cognitive processes; all linguistic form is conceptually meaningful. In this pilot study, a CG approach was applied to investigate whether people with aphasia (PWA) have cognitive linguistic difficulty not predicted from traditional, componential models of aphasia ...
Molly, Manning, Sue, Franklin
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