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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter Mouton August 22, 2012

Grammatical constraints and verb-framed languages: The case of Italian

  • Filippo-Enrico Cardini,

    Filippo-Enrico Cardini, Piazza Bonavino, 2b/9, 16156 Genova, Italy.

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From the journal Language and Cognition

Abstract

In the literature on motion events, a lot of previous research can be found on the contrast between the typology of expression favoured by so-called ‘verb-framed languages’ and that favoured by so-called ‘satellite-framed languages.’ Only some of this previous research, however, has focused its attention on the reasons that ultimately bring about such contrasting fashions of speaking. The present study explores this issue in some depth by trying to identify what specific grammatical constraints lead Italian speakers to be shy of the use of manner verbs in the expression of motion events (at least when compared with speakers of a typical satellite-framed language such as English). The outcome of an interpretation task and a grammatical judgement task conducted with some Italian native speakers suggests that this phenomenon ultimately originates from features exhibited by the Italian system of spatial prepositions, as well as from features exhibited by a certain kind of Italian manner verbs. The constraints caused by the verbs appear to be particularly significant.

About the author

Filippo-Enrico Cardini,

Filippo-Enrico Cardini, Piazza Bonavino, 2b/9, 16156 Genova, Italy.

Published Online: 2012-08-22
Published in Print: 2012-09-17

©[2012] by Walter de Gruyter Berlin Boston

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