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From ‘No, she does’ to ‘Yes, she does’: Negation processing in negative yes–no questions by Chinese users of English ...
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Mental simulation of the illusory and the factual in negation processing ...
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Towards a credibility revolution in bilingualism research : Open data and materials as stepping stones to more reproducible and replicable research
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Crosslinguistic influence on English and Chinese L2 speakers’ conceptualization of event serialization patterns
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Crosslinguistic influence on English and Chinese L2 speakers’ conceptualization of event series ...
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Abstract:
Aims and objectives/purpose/research question:The expression of event series varies across languages in intriguing ways. One key difference is that in some linguistic systems, such as Chinese, events can be tightly sequenced using serial verb constructions (SVCs), for example, qù kāi mén ‘go open door’. Linguistic systems with this property are known as serializing, and those without it, such as English, as non-serializing. This paper explores whether second language (L2) learners with a serializing first language (L1) conceptually transfer tight L1-based event serialization patterns into their non-serializing L2, and, if L2 learners with a non-serializing L1 acquire tight SVC-modulated event serialization in the L2.Design/methodology/approach:To investigate this, a task was created to estimate temporal distances between events on a time axis. Participants were asked to circle two numbers on the axis (0 = far past, 9 = far future) based on their understanding of when two events expressed by two verbs in each ...
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Keyword:
200399 Language Studies not elsewhere classified; Education; FOS Languages and literature; FOS Sociology; Sociology
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URL: https://sage.figshare.com/collections/Crosslinguistic_influence_on_English_and_Chinese_L2_speakers_conceptualization_of_event_series/5085536 https://dx.doi.org/10.25384/sage.c.5085536
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Crosslinguistic influence on English and Chinese L2 speakers’ conceptualization of event series ...
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chl2serialisation – Research Data for Crosslinguistic influence on English and Chinese L2 speakers’ conceptualization of event series ...
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chl2serialisation – Research Data for Crosslinguistic influence on English and Chinese L2 speakers’ conceptualization of event series ...
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enl2serialisation – Research Data for Crosslinguistic influence on English and Chinese L2 speakers’ conceptualization of event series ...
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enl2serialisation – Research Data for Crosslinguistic influence on English and Chinese L2 speakers’ conceptualization of event series ...
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Changing event phase categorisation in second language users through perceptual learning ...
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Changing Event Categorisation in Second Language Users Through Perceptual Learning
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Defying chronology: : Crosslinguistic variation in reverse order reports
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Special Issue : Tense, Aspect, and Modality in L2 (TAML2)
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In: ISSN: 0019-042X ; EISSN: 1613-4141 ; International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02133196 ; International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching, 55 (3), pp.221-345, 2017 (2017)
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Covariation between temporal interlanguage features and nonverbal event categorisation
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‘It starts to explode.’ Phasal segmentation of contextualised events in L2 English
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Facilitative effects of learner-directed codeswitching : Evidence from Chinese learners of English
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