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Psychological verbs and their arguments

open access: yesBorealis: An International Journal of Hispanic Linguistics, 2018
In this paper it is argued that objects of subject experiencer psychological verbs do not have kind reference, but rather refer to individual object entities: specific individuals, generic plurals, and even entity correlates of a property.
Daria Seres, M.Teresa Espinal
doaj   +4 more sources

Psychological aspects of transitive verbs [PDF]

open access: yesJournal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 1970
It has previously been shown that transitive verbs are more difficult to recall than intransitive. Experiment I replicated this finding. Experiment II examined the associations to, and response latencies of, transitive and intransitive verbs. Latencies of responses did not differ, but the form class of responses was significantly different.
Polzella, Donald J.   +1 more
exaly   +4 more sources

COMPLEMENT CLAUSES OF PSYCHOLOGICAL VERBS IN CROATIAN

open access: yesFluminensia: Journal for Philological Research, 2016
The paper discusses the complement clauses of psychological verbs in Croatian. Subordinate clauses which appear with some psychological verbs can be interpreted in different ways: either as causative clauses (Šojat 2008) or as clausal realizations of the
Ivana Oraić Rabušić
doaj   +3 more sources

Freud and collocation: a psychodynamic interpretation of ‘make’ and ‘do’ in English [PDF]

open access: yesFrontiers in Psychology
This study explores the relationship between everyday English verb choice and Freud’s structural theory of personality. Using a qualitative conceptual analysis, the research examines approximately 100 collocational expressions involving the verbs ‘make ...
Rasheed Al-Jarrah   +4 more
doaj   +2 more sources

The conceptualisation of primary emotions in the Serbian language (The case of verbs expressing joy, sadness, fear and anger) [PDF]

open access: yesJužnoslovenski Filolog, 2021
The paper analyses the conceptual mechanisms underlying the development of secondary emotional meanings of “non-emotional” verbs (in relation to their primary meaning).
Milenković Ana V.
doaj   +1 more source

Basic Characteristics and Aspectual Properties of Croatian ObjExp Verbs

open access: yesRasprave Instituta za Hrvatski Jezik i Jezikoslovlje, 2021
This paper discusses the basic characteristics of ObjExp verbs in Croatian (thematic roles, argument structure, anticausative variant, aspect of the verb), with special attention paid to the aspectual properties of such verbs.
Matea Birtić, Ivana Brač
doaj   +1 more source

Наблюдения върху синтактичната реализация на предикати за емоционални състояния

open access: yesZeszyty Cyrylo-Metodiańskie, 2021
Observations on the Syntactic Realization of Emotional Predicates. The object of the analysis in the following paper are sentences with verbs for emotions (psychological verbs, Experiencer verbs) in the modern Bulgarian language.
Tisheva, Yovka
doaj   +1 more source

Nominative objects in Korean

open access: yesLinguistics, 2022
This article addresses the hitherto neglected topic of the Korean Nominative Object Construction (NOC) within the Cognitive Grammar (CG) framework. In the NOC, schematically illustrated as [N-NOM N-NOM PSYCH-PRED], the second NP behaves like a direct ...
Park Chongwon, Kim Jong-Bok
doaj   +1 more source

Mandarin and English Event Cognitive Alignment From Corpus-Based Semantic Fusion Model Perspective

open access: yesFrontiers in Psychology, 2022
The study explores the fusion of semantic roles and the different semantic fusion types, aiming at establishing a semantic fusion model to explain the cognitive alignment of events in Chinese and English simple sentence constructions containing two verbs.
Xiangling Li
doaj   +1 more source

Deconstructing North Sámi sensive verbs

open access: yesGlossa, 2021
North Sámi has a class of derived verbs called sensive verbs. Descriptively, these verbs are formed by adding the suffix /ʃ/ to an adjectival or nominal base, and the resulting verb means ‘find [object] (too) ADJECTIVE/NOUN’.
Marit Julien
doaj   +2 more sources

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