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What is the main purpose of introducing conceptual blending theory in cognitive linguistics? inizia ad imparare
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To replace the static picture of conceptualization with a more dynamic approach that includes aspects of ongoing language processing
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Who originally proposed conceptual blending theory? inizia ad imparare
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Gilles Fauconnier and Mark Turner
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What dynamic aspect of language processing does conceptual blending theory address that traditional cognitive linguistics did not? inizia ad imparare
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How mental spaces are constructed and blended during online language processing
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What are the three main deficiencies of traditional metaphor and metonymy analysis according to the text? inizia ad imparare
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It doesn't consider specific context, it only offers one-way explanation from source to target, and it suggests metaphorical mapping is fully processed and lexicalized
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How does conceptual blending theory address the limitation that traditional analysis doesn't consider specific context? inizia ad imparare
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By using context-dependent mental spaces constructed during online processing
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What is a mental space in conceptual blending theory? inizia ad imparare
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Small conceptual packets constructed as we think and talk, for purposes of local understanding and action, operating in working memory but built partly from long-term memory
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How do mental spaces differ from cognitive models stored in long-term memory? inizia ad imparare
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Mental spaces are online conceptual representations constructed under the influence of incoming information, while cognitive models are stored structures in long-term memory
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What is the relationship between mental spaces and working memory? inizia ad imparare
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Mental spaces operate in working memory
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In the "shot in the arm" example, what are the two input spaces? inizia ad imparare
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Hiring space and injection space
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What specific information is contained in the hiring space? inizia ad imparare
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Volkswagen has hired a new director (Wolfgang Bernhard), investors celebrated by raising VW's market cap by $1 billion
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What specific information is contained in the injection space? inizia ad imparare
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A doctor or nurse administering a syringe containing medicine intravenously in the arm of a patient, with the purpose of improving health
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inizia ad imparare
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A new conceptual space containing information projected from both input spaces, characterized by emergent structure
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What is meant by "emergent structure" in a blended space? inizia ad imparare
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A new, unified conceptual structure in the blended space that differs from both input spaces and is less complex than their simple addition
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What three cognitive processes are involved in creating a blended space? inizia ad imparare
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Composition, completion, and elaboration
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How does the process of completion work in the "shot in the arm" example? inizia ad imparare
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The sentence underspecifies the agent and instrument for the injection, so these indispensable elements from the injection frame are added to the blend
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What is compression in conceptual blending? inizia ad imparare
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The process by which conceptual complexity from several sources is reduced considerably, creating a unified and cognitively manageable structure
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What is the ultimate goal of compression according to Fauconnier and Turner? inizia ad imparare
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To create a unified conceptual structure with "human scale" that is cognitively manageable
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What are vital relations in conceptual blending? inizia ad imparare
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Relations like identity, space, time, cause-effect, and part-whole that underlie cross-mappings between input spaces
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Which vital relation is most prominent in metaphor according to the text? inizia ad imparare
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How does compression create a cognitively manageable structure? inizia ad imparare
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By reducing the conceptual complexity of inputs from several sources to a unified structure that has "human scale"
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What is space compression and which example illustrates it? inizia ad imparare
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Compression of spatially distant elements; illustrated by "American-type tornado"
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What two input spaces are involved in the "American-type tornado" blend? inizia ad imparare
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Knowledge of tornado effects in the US/Caribbean, and knowledge of typical European thunderstorm effects
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What is time compression and which example illustrates it? inizia ad imparare
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Compression of temporally distant elements; illustrated by the regatta blend (1853 Northern Light vs 1993 Great American II)
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What two input spaces are involved in the regatta blend? inizia ad imparare
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The 1853 voyage of Northern Light and the 1993 voyage of Great American II
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What is cause-effect compression and which example illustrates it? inizia ad imparare
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Compression of a causal chain; illustrated by "John broke the window"
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What intermediate stages are compressed in the "John broke the window" blend? inizia ad imparare
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Bending knees, putting out hand, grasping stone, pulling stone towards body, and the actual contact of the stone with the window
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What is part-whole compression and which example illustrates it? inizia ad imparare
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Compression of part-whole relations; illustrated by "That's Jane Doe" (face → whole person)
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What are the two input spaces in the "That's Jane Doe" blend? inizia ad imparare
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The person's face (or voice) and the person as a whole
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What are blended properties in conceptual blending theory? inizia ad imparare
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Properties that result from compression and are attached to concepts in the blended space
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What are the five governing principles of conceptual blending mentioned in the text? inizia ad imparare
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Topology principle, principle of promoting vital relations, integration principle, unpacking principle, and relevance principle
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Who introduced the notion of frame into linguistics and when? inizia ad imparare
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Charles Fillmore in the middle of the 1970s
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What is Fillmore's classic example used to introduce frames? inizia ad imparare
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The commercial event frame, particularly the verb buy
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What are the four components of the [BUY] frame? inizia ad imparare
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BUYER, SELLER, GOODS, MONEY
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In the sentence "David bought an old shirt from John for ten pounds," how are the frame components represented syntactically? inizia ad imparare
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BUYER (David) as subject, GOODS (an old shirt) as direct object, SELLER (John) as first adverbial, MONEY (ten pounds) as second adverbial
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What is meant by "syntactic perspective" in frame theory? inizia ad imparare
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The assignment of syntactic roles to frame components, governed largely by verb choice
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How do the verbs buy, sell, charge, and pay relate to the [COMMERCIAL EVENT] frame? inizia ad imparare
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They all describe the same commercial event but from different perspectives
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What perspective does the verb buy take in the commercial event frame? inizia ad imparare
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BUYER's perspective, with BUYER and GOODS as subject and object
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What perspective does the verb sell take in the commercial event frame? inizia ad imparare
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SELLER's perspective, with SELLER and GOODS as subject and object
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How does the frame approach go beyond the figure/ground approach? inizia ad imparare
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It pays more attention to less prominent parts of sentences like adverbials
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How did Fillmore's definition of frame evolve from 1975 to 1992? inizia ad imparare
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From "system of linguistic choices associated with scenes" to "cognitive structures whose knowledge is presupposed for the concepts encoded by words"
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What did Fillmore mean by "scenes" in his early definition of frames? inizia ad imparare
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Situations, related to the cognitive linguistics notion of 'situation'
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How are frames currently defined in cognitive linguistics? inizia ad imparare
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Specific unified frameworks of knowledge or coherent schematizations of experience
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What is the relationship between perspective and attention in frame theory? inizia ad imparare
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Perspective depends on what attracts our attention; verbs direct attention to specific frame components
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How does the frame approach differ from Langacker's Cognitive Grammar in terms of scope? inizia ad imparare
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Frame approach addresses all sentence elements including indirect objects and adverbials, while Langacker focuses primarily on the two most prominent entities
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In which discipline besides linguistics has the frame notion been applied? inizia ad imparare
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Who defined frames as "a data-structure for representing a stereotyped situation"? inizia ad imparare
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What knowledge is activated when the category PLANE is mentioned? inizia ad imparare
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The [FLYING ON A PLANE] frame, including PILOT, FLIGHT ATTENDANT, LIFE VEST, SAFETY BELT, FIRST CLASS, ECONOMY CLASS, etc.
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What is a script in the context of cognitive models? inizia ad imparare
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Knowledge structures designed for frequently recurring event sequences
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How do scripts differ from frames? inizia ad imparare
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Scripts represent larger sequences of events connected by causal chains, while frames represent knowledge about specific situations
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What are the three main stages of the [FLYING ON A PLANE] script? inizia ad imparare
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Pre-flight stage, the flight (with pre-take-off, flight, and post-landing sub-stages), and post-flight stage
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What are the four scenes in the [RESTAURANT] script? inizia ad imparare
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Entering, ordering, eating, exiting
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What are the entry conditions for the restaurant script? inizia ad imparare
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Customer is hungry and has money
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What are the props in the restaurant script? inizia ad imparare
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Tables, menu, food, bill, money
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What are the roles in the restaurant script? inizia ad imparare
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Customer, waiter, cook, cashier, owner
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Why do the definite articles in "the life vest" and "the flight attendant" sound natural in the plane story? inizia ad imparare
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Because the [FLYING ON A PLANE] frame provides the necessary world knowledge that these items exist on a plane
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What allows us to make the right inferences about "the life vest" and "the flight attendant"? inizia ad imparare
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Our world knowledge activated by the [FLYING ON A PLANE] frame
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How do frames and scripts help in understanding discourse? inizia ad imparare
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They allow us to unconsciously fill in missing information and make necessary inferences
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Why is the first John restaurant story understandable but the second one is not? inizia ad imparare
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The first fits our internalized restaurant script, allowing us to fill in missing stages; the second doesn't correspond to script expectations
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What happens when events in a story don't correspond to script expectations? inizia ad imparare
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The events cannot be brought into a meaningful causal chain and the story seems incoherent
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How does subchapter 5.2 extend the notion of frames from the previous section? inizia ad imparare
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It extends frames to describe more general situations such as event chains linked by temporal sequences or causation
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What is the main limitation of Fillmore's commercial event-frame mentioned in the text? inizia ad imparare
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It is context- and culture-dependent, containing specific information about buying/selling practices that may not apply universally
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Who proposed the universalist-cognitive approach to event-frames? inizia ad imparare
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What are the six cognitive components of a motion event-frame? inizia ad imparare
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FIGURE, GROUND, PATH, MOTION, MANNER, CAUSE
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What is Talmy's definition of an event-frame? inizia ad imparare
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A set of conceptual elements and interrelationships that are evoked together or co-evoke each other
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How are FIGURE, GROUND, and PATH illustrated in the balloon example? inizia ad imparare
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Balloon as FIGURE, house as GROUND, the course through space as PATH
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What is the relationship between motion and figure according to the text? inizia ad imparare
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Motion can be conceived without a figure, but a figure cannot move without motion; static locative relations are a special case of zero-motion
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What special case of motion includes static locative relations? inizia ad imparare
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Zero-motion or locatedness with a zero-path
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What does the MANNER component describe in motion events? inizia ad imparare
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The way or manner of movement (e.g., flying vs. running vs. crawling)
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What does the CAUSE component refer to in motion events? inizia ad imparare
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The cause that makes the moving object start moving or stay in motion
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What is windowing of attention? inizia ad imparare
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The cognitive process of foregrounding certain portions of an event-frame
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What is the reverse process of windowing? inizia ad imparare
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Gapping (backgrounding conceptual material that is part of an event-frame)
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What are the three positional types of path-windowing? inizia ad imparare
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Initial, medial, and final windowing
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How is path-windowing achieved linguistically? inizia ad imparare
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By explicitly using linguistic expressions that refer to certain portions of the PATH
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What are the three types of paths in motion events? inizia ad imparare
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Open paths, closed paths, and fictive paths
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What defines an open path? inizia ad imparare
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A path whose beginning point and ending point are at different locations in space
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What defines a closed path? inizia ad imparare
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A path where the starting and end point coincide at the same location in space (circular)
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Why is single initial windowing not possible for closed paths in the "I need the milk" example? inizia ad imparare
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Because the initial portion alone doesn't provide enough information to ensure the whole motion event is realized as a closed path
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What is the circular path in the milk example? inizia ad imparare
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The person moves from the table to the refrigerator and back to the table
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inizia ad imparare
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Imaginary paths used to express static locative relations as involving motion
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How does "My bike is across the street from the bakery" involve a fictive path? inizia ad imparare
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The hearer constructs a mental path from the bakery (reference point) across the street to the bike's location
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How does the order of linguistic constituents differ between real and fictive paths? inizia ad imparare
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In real paths, the order follows the direction of the path; in fictive paths, the order may not follow the path direction (e.g., final portion first)
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When can the main reference point be omitted in fictive path-windowing? inizia ad imparare
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When its identity is generally provided by context or convention
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How does Talmy's view of causation differ from traditional approaches? inizia ad imparare
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He argues for a gradient of causativity with different degrees rather than a simple yes/no category
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What are the three types of causation according to Talmy? inizia ad imparare
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Event-causation, author-causation, agent-causation
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What are the five subevents in "John broke the window with a stone"? inizia ad imparare
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1) Agent intends to act, 2) Agent sets body in motion, 3) Intermediate subevent(s), 4) Penultimate subevent (immediate cause), 5) Final resulting subevent
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Which stages are typically windowed in causal-chain event-frames? inizia ad imparare
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The initiating agent (stage 1) and the final result (stage 5)
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What is the most significant aspect in a causal-chain event-frame and why? inizia ad imparare
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The penultimate event (stage 4) because it refers to the immediate cause of the final result
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Which stage do by-clauses typically refer to in English? inizia ad imparare
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The penultimate subevent (immediate cause)
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What does Talmy's approach add to the analysis of frames compared to Fillmore's? inizia ad imparare
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It widens investigation to adverbials and other less prominent parts of clause structure, and accounts for blocked complements, providing a comprehensive cognitive view
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What two ways does subchapter 5.3 extend the discussion of event-frames? inizia ad imparare
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It investigates differences in the expression of motion event-frames across languages, and shows that language-specific framing has consequences for narrative style
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What are the six components of motion event-frames? inizia ad imparare
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FIGURE, GROUND, MOTION, PATH, MANNER, CAUSE
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What English sentence is used to illustrate cross-linguistic differences in motion event framing? inizia ad imparare
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"Blériot flew across the Channel"
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How is PATH expressed in English motion event descriptions? inizia ad imparare
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By means of a particle (e.g., "across" in "flew across the Channel")
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How is PATH expressed in French motion event descriptions? inizia ad imparare
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Incorporated in the verb meaning (e.g., "traversa" in "Blériot traversa la Manche en avion")
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How is MANNER expressed in English and German motion descriptions? inizia ad imparare
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Incorporated in the verb (e.g., "rode" in "The boy rode out of the yard")
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How is MANNER expressed in French and Spanish motion descriptions? inizia ad imparare
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Added as a separate adverbial (e.g., "à cheval" in "Le garçon sortit à cheval de la cour")
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What is a verb-framed language and which languages are examples? inizia ad imparare
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A language where PATH is expressed in the verb; examples include French, Spanish, all Romance languages, Semitic languages (Arabic, Hebrew), Japanese
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What is a satellite-framed language and which languages are examples? inizia ad imparare
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A language where PATH is expressed in a satellite (particle); examples include English, German, all Indo-European languages except Romance, Finno-Ugric languages, Chinese
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What is the relationship between PATH and MANNER expression in verb-framed vs satellite-framed languages? inizia ad imparare
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In verb-framed languages, PATH is in the verb and MANNER is in an adverbial; in satellite-framed languages, MANNER is in the verb and PATH is in a satellite
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According to Talmy, how can all languages of the world be categorized regarding motion event framing? inizia ad imparare
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All languages can be categorized as either verb-framed or satellite-framed
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What is the unified view of PATH and MANNER expression presented in Figure 5.19? inizia ad imparare
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In English (satellite-framed), MANNER is in the verb and PATH is in a satellite; in Spanish (verb-framed), PATH is in the verb and MANNER is in an adverbial
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What did Slobin's comparative study of novels examine? inizia ad imparare
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Translations of English-language novels into Spanish and vice versa, focusing on descriptions of motion events
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What were Slobin's main findings about MANNER expression in English-to-Spanish translations? inizia ad imparare
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Spanish translators omit manner information about half of the time
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What were Slobin's main findings about MANNER expression in Spanish-to-English translations? inizia ad imparare
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English translators actually add manner to the Spanish original in almost a quarter of their translations
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What two strategies do Spanish translators use when faced with English manner verbs? inizia ad imparare
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Omission of manner information (leave-out strategy) or adding an adverbial clause
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Why do English translators sometimes avoid using Romance cognates of Spanish verbs? inizia ad imparare
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Because English words of Romance origin often have a ring of formality about them
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What was the methodology of Slobin's Frog story study? inizia ad imparare
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Elicited stories from Spanish and English speakers using the wordless picture story "Frog, Where Are You?" with 60 stories per language from different age groups
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How many verb types did English narrators use in the Frog story compared to Spanish narrators? inizia ad imparare
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English: 47 verb stems (123 with satellites); Spanish: 27 verb types
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What is the main difference in PATH description between English and Spanish stories? inizia ad imparare
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English narrators use more varied verbs and satellites for detailed PATH descriptions, while Spanish narrators use fewer verb types
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What is an example of path-windowing from the English stories? inizia ad imparare
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"The deer threw the boy over a cliff into a pond" (medial and final window on PATH)
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How many examples of combined path-windowing were found in Spanish stories? inizia ad imparare
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Only three examples where either an initial or medial window was combined with a final path window
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How do English and Spanish narrators differ in describing the setting of motion events? inizia ad imparare
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English incorporates setting in the motion event through path-windowing, resulting in dynamic description; Spanish describes setting separately in static clauses
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What cognitive components are expressed in the sentence "He tips him off over a cliff into the water"? inizia ad imparare
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AGENT, MOTION, FIGURE, PATH (with medial and final windows), CAUSE, MANNER, and setting information
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How does the Spanish translation of "I climbed up the path over the cliffs towards the rest of the people" differ from the English original? inizia ad imparare
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The Spanish uses three clauses instead of one, omits the vertical directionality (up) and the medial window (over the cliffs), and isolates setting details in separate relative clauses
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What do Spanish translators sometimes omit to maintain a dynamic event description? inizia ad imparare
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Locative detail and path-windowing information
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Why are satellite-framed languages like English better suited for descriptions of MANNER and PATH? inizia ad imparare
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Because MANNER is often incorporated in the verb meaning, and PATH/setting can be expressed in the same clause as the motion event by opening attentional windows
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What is the typical narrative style difference between English and Spanish based on the studies? inizia ad imparare
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English narratives are more dynamic with detailed MANNER and PATH descriptions; Spanish narratives are more static and step-by-step
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What overall conclusion does the subchapter reach about the relationship between language-specific framing and narrative style? inizia ad imparare
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Language-specific framing of motion events has far-reaching consequences for the narrative style typical of different languages
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What is the central claim of Construction Grammar regarding frames and syntax? inizia ad imparare
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That frames and possible perspectives are reflected linguistically in the syntax of clauses, or that syntactic patterns may be associated with conceptual frame structure
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What are the six components of a motion event-frame? inizia ad imparare
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MOTION, FIGURE, PATH, GROUND, MANNER, CAUSE
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What sentence illustrates the caused-motion event-frame? inizia ad imparare
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"The draught blew the pencil off the table"
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What is the relationship between frame components and syntactic constituents in the caused-motion construction? inizia ad imparare
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There is a very close correspondence: CAUSE → Subject, MOTION → Verb, FIGURE → Object, PATH/GROUND → Adverbial
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What is the main idea behind Construction Grammar's view of syntactic patterns? inizia ad imparare
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Syntactic patterns themselves may have a share in encoding particular types of experience, and constructions are stored in long-term memory with both their form and meaning
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What is Goldberg's argument for constructional meaning? inizia ad imparare
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We identify caused-motion meaning not only in sentences with fitting verbal meanings, but also with verbs that don't suggest caused-motion meaning by themselves
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What example does Goldberg use to demonstrate that constructional meaning is independent of verb meaning? inizia ad imparare
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"Frank sneezed the tissue off the table" (where "sneeze" is intransitive and doesn't suggest caused-motion)
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How is "Frank sneezed the tissue off the table" interpreted despite the verb "sneeze"? inizia ad imparare
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As caused motion: 'Frank sneezed and thus caused the tissue to be swept off the table'
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What do examples like "Barnes played him into trouble" show about constructional meaning? inizia ad imparare
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The goal-orientation is derived from the construction as a whole, not from the verb meaning
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How do transitive-causative verbs like "sit" and "stand" relate to the caused-motion construction? inizia ad imparare
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Their transitive use can be explained through the caused-motion construction, rather than as a special sense distinct from their intransitive meaning
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What are the three key claims about constructions made in the text? inizia ad imparare
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1) Close correspondence between conceptual structures and syntactic structures, 2) Constructions may be stored in long-term memory like frames, 3) Constructions may have meanings independent of lexical items
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What does it mean that constructions are pairings of forms and meanings? inizia ad imparare
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Like words, constructions are pairings where the form automatically evokes the meaning and vice versa
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What is the significance of constructions being stored in long-term memory like words? inizia ad imparare
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It means we don't generate constructions on the fly but retrieve them as whole units, with their syntactic make-up and associated scene/event knowledge
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What are the three major argument-structure constructions discussed? inizia ad imparare
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Caused-motion construction, cause-receive construction (ditransitive), resultative construction (cause-become)
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What basic experience and clause structure characterize the caused-motion construction? inizia ad imparare
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Someone causing something else to move; Subject–Verb–Object–Adverbial (SVOA)
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What basic experience and clause structure characterize the cause-receive construction? inizia ad imparare
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Someone causing someone else to receive something; Subject–Verb–Objectind–Objectdir (SVOO)
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What basic experience and clause structure characterize the resultative construction? inizia ad imparare
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Someone causing something to change state; Subject–Verb–Object–Object complement (SVOCO)
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What do the three argument-structure constructions share in common? inizia ad imparare
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They join basic human experiences with basic syntactic clause patterns
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Are constructions polysemous according to the text? inizia ad imparare
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Yes, like lexemes, constructions can have a range of related meanings
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What are the five semantic variants of the caused-motion construction shown in Figure 5.23? inizia ad imparare
|
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a) X causes Y to move Z (central sense), b) X causes Y to move Z (motion not strictly entailed), c) X enables Y to move Z, d) X helps Y to move Z, e) X prevents Y from moving from Z
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What is the shell-content construction? inizia ad imparare
|
|
A construction combining an abstract noun and dependent clause or infinitive, where the dependent clause is either directly attached or linked by BE
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What is the cognitive-pragmatic function of the shell-content construction? inizia ad imparare
|
|
To make a whole proposition available as a noun-like concept (reification) and present it under a certain perspective
|
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What is a shell noun and what does it do? inizia ad imparare
|
|
An abstract noun (fact, aim, chance, problem, etc.) that serves as a container or 'shell' for the information in the dependent clause
|
|
|
What are the two traditional approaches to idioms in linguistics? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Lexicological (multi-word items with non-compositional meaning) and syntactic (structural exceptions not covered by regular syntactic rules)
|
|
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How do Fillmore, Kay & O'Connor view formal idioms? inizia ad imparare
|
|
As syntactic patterns dedicated to semantic and pragmatic purposes not knowable from their form alone
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What are the specific characteristics of the let-alone construction? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Allows fragments, requires juxtaposed elements to represent points on a scale, assumes scales are feasible for evaluation
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Why are formal idioms considered productive despite their irregularity? inizia ad imparare
|
|
They serve as syntactic models for new sentences and share specific pragmatic functions
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|
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How does viewing constructions as idioms revolutionize our model of syntax? inizia ad imparare
|
|
It means syntax is not just rule-governed but includes stored patterns, and we can do away with traditional syntactic rules
|
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What three types of knowledge do constructions store according to the text? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Conceptual-semantic, syntactic, and pragmatic knowledge
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What does Croft's statement "The constructional tail has come to wag the syntactic dog" mean? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Constructions, not traditional syntactic rules, are now seen as the primary generators of sentences
|
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What fields outside linguistics have applied conceptual blending theory? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Cognitive psychology, mathematics, computing, musicology, archaeology
|
|
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What types of linguistic phenomena does the subchapter apply blending analysis to? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Lexical, grammatical, and pragmatic phenomena
|
|
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What are examples of morphological blends mentioned in the text? inizia ad imparare
|
|
smog, brunch, motel, infotainment
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How does the blending analysis of smog, brunch, and motel differ from infotainment? inizia ad imparare
|
|
For smog, brunch, motel, the blending process is historical and lexicalized; for infotainment, the emergent structure is open-ended and not conclusively definable
|
|
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Why do blends like swimsation and sportianity fail to become conventionalized? inizia ad imparare
|
|
The cross-space mappings are not vital (not identity, space, time, cause-effect, or part-whole relations), so composition and completion don't apply, and compression doesn't produce a coherent emergent structure
|
|
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What is the blending analysis of the ad-hoc blend Ballacktisch? inizia ad imparare
|
|
It involves input spaces for Ballack (soccer player, Bayern Munich) and Real (soccer team, Madrid, "galactic/outstanding"), with cross-space mappings of identity and space, compressing to an emergent structure suggesting Ballack is joining Real Madrid
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|
What are the input spaces in the Ballacktisch blend? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Input space 1: Ballack space (Ballack as soccer player, Bayern Munich); Input space 2: Real space (Real as soccer team, Madrid, with blended property 'galactic/outstanding')
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What is the blended property in the Ballacktisch example? inizia ad imparare
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|
What vital relations are compressed in the Ballacktisch blend? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Identity (between people and their roles as soccer players) and space (between locations Munich and Madrid)
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|
What is the emergent structure of the Ballacktisch blend? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Ballack can be regarded as galactic/outstanding and thus eligible for Real Madrid
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How can compounds be understood as conceptual blends? inizia ad imparare
|
|
They involve input spaces for each constituent, with emergent structure in the blended space that integrates core information from the input spaces
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What is the blending analysis of a compositional compound like apple juice? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Input spaces: 'apple space' and 'juice space'; emergent structure integrates core information from apple space into juice space
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What extra attributes does the compound wheelchair have beyond its constituents? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Attributes related to hospitals or invalidity, arising from blending with additional input spaces
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What are the four possible emergent structures for cherry jeans? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Cherry red jeans (color property), jeans printed with cherry pattern (shape property), jeans soiled by cherry juice stains (cause-effect), jeans worn for cherry picking (cause-effect)
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|
What determines which interpretation of cherry jeans is most likely? inizia ad imparare
|
|
The cross-space mapping of identity between the color property of cherry space and jeans space, projecting both into the blended space
|
|
|
What are prop words in acronym formation? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Existing English words used as phonological models for acronyms pronounced as natural words
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|
How does the acronym CARE demonstrate conceptual blending? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Input spaces: CARE meaning (Cooperative American Relief to Europe) and the word "care"; cross-space mapping: cause-effect relation between caring attitude and execution of intention
|
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|
What input spaces are involved in the PISA acronym blend? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Input space 1: PISA test space (educational achievement testing); Input space 2: Pisa tower space (leaning tower of Pisa as hallmark of European culture)
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|
What cross-space mapping is assumed in the PISA blend? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Cause-effect relation between educational achievement (cause) and cultural reputation of architectural heritage (effect)
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|
What is the emergent structure of the PISA blend? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Good PISA test results maintain cultural heritage, but education may be off course like the leaning tower
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|
What types of mental spaces are typically involved in word-formation blends? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Most are conceptualized as states or situations, though some involve events with actions and participant roles
|
|
|
What event schemas are in input space 1 of the sneezing blend? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Causing event (Frank sneezed) and effected event (the tissue fell off the table)
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|
|
What event schema is in input space 2 of the sneezing blend? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Caused-motion event (Frank pushed the tissue off the table)
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|
|
How do counterfactual sentences relate to conceptual blending? inizia ad imparare
|
|
They involve two different worlds (factual and counterfactual) that can be analyzed as input spaces in a blend
|
|
|
What input spaces are involved in the "If I were you" blend? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Input space 1: speech event space (speaker, hearer, advice); Input space 2: decision-making space (hearer as agent deciding on job application)
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|
|
What is the effect of the cross-space identity mapping in counterfactuals? inizia ad imparare
|
|
The speaker is mapped onto the hearer slot, so the blend looks at the hearer's dilemma from the speaker's point of view, creating a patronizing tone
|
|
|
What are space builders and what do they do? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Grammatical expressions that either open up a new space or shift focus to an existing space (e.g., once upon a time, in that story, in the movie)
|
|
|
What does the subchapter conclude about the capabilities of blending analysis? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Blending analysis can describe both stock examples of lexicalized word-formations or entrenched constructions and more marginal examples, extending the field of linguistic research
|
|
|
What text types does subchapter 6.3 focus on for conceptual blending analysis? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Advertising texts, riddles, and jokes
|
|
|
Why are advertising texts, riddles, and jokes particularly interesting for conceptual blending analysis? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Because conceptual blending takes on a special form and achieves a special effect in these text types
|
|
|
What basic distinction did Roland Barthes make regarding text/picture relationships in advertising? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Anchorage (text provides disambiguation and deictic support for the picture) vs relay (text and image standing in a complementary relationship)
|
|
|
Which type of text/picture relationship does the subchapter focus on and why? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Relay, because it promises more interesting results
|
|
|
What specific advertisement is analyzed in the text? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Pantene shampoo and conditioner ad from Marie Claire (January 2000)
|
|
|
What are the two input spaces in the Pantene advertisement blend? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Lovers space (picture-based) and Pantene space (based on both pictures and text)
|
|
|
What cross-space identity mappings are used in the Pantene ad? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Identity between the two lovers and the two products, and between their spatial relations (close to each other, facing each other)
|
|
|
What emergent structure is created in the Pantene ad's blended space? inizia ad imparare
|
|
The prototypical interaction of the lovers is projected onto the relationship of the hair-care products, with the products as agents working together
|
|
|
What associations does the SETTING in the lovers space evoke? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Nature, freshness, purity, youth, and memories of a romantic meeting
|
|
|
How is the SETTING of the lovers space related to the PURPOSE of the Pantene space? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Through a forced cross-space mapping (identity or cause-effect) that is forced upon the reader by the ad's design
|
|
|
What headline is used in the Pantene ad and what does it suggest? inizia ad imparare
|
|
"Some things just work better together" - suggests that the shampoo and conditioner work better together, like the lovers
|
|
|
How do advertisers treat the indeterminacy of the emergent structure in ads like Pantene? inizia ad imparare
|
|
They exploit and even force the indeterminacy upon the reader, but hide the indeterminacy rather than lay it open
|
|
|
What riddle do Fauconnier and Turner use as a prime example of conceptual blending? inizia ad imparare
|
|
|
|
|
What is the scenario described in the Buddhist monk riddle? inizia ad imparare
|
|
A Buddhist monk begins at dawn walking up a mountain, reaches the top at sunset, meditates for several days, then walks back down at dawn and reaches the foot at sunset
|
|
|
What is the question asked in the Buddhist monk riddle? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Is there a place on the path that the monk occupies at the same hour of the day on the two separate journeys?
|
|
|
How does the blending approach solve the Buddhist monk riddle? inizia ad imparare
|
|
By imagining the monk walking up and down the mountain on the same day, creating a cross-space identity relation where he 'meets himself'
|
|
|
What cross-space relations are involved in the Buddhist monk blend? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Identity (the monk), place (the path), and time (the hour)
|
|
|
What is compressed in the Buddhist monk blend? inizia ad imparare
|
|
The person of the monk and the path are unified; the days of the two journeys are compressed, but not the hour of the imaginary meeting
|
|
|
What remains vague in the emergent structure of the Buddhist monk blend? inizia ad imparare
|
|
The exact position of the imaginary meeting point
|
|
|
What does the Buddhist monk riddle demonstrate about conceptual blending? inizia ad imparare
|
|
That conceptual blending can be a deliberately chosen problem-solving strategy, not just an unconscious process
|
|
|
What principle from Arthur Koestler's work is relevant for understanding jokes through blending? inizia ad imparare
|
|
The principle that jokes involve perceiving a situation or idea L in two self-consistent but habitually incompatible frames of reference M1 and M2
|
|
|
What child's joke is analyzed in the text? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Mother: "Why were you sent home early, Mary?" Mary: "Well, Mum, the boy next to me was smoking." Mother: "But if he was smoking, why were you sent home?" Mary: "I set him on fire."
|
|
|
What are the two input spaces in the Mary joke blend? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Cigarette-smoking space and setting-on-fire space
|
|
|
What encyclopaedic knowledge is included in input space 1 of the Mary joke? inizia ad imparare
|
|
That smoking is a common violation of school rules
|
|
|
What encyclopaedic knowledge is included in input space 2 of the Mary joke? inizia ad imparare
|
|
That burning objects smoke
|
|
|
What cross-space mappings are established in the Mary joke blend? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Identity (boy as AGENT in space 1 and PATIENT in space 2), cause-effect (setting fire ↔ smoking), and scale of offence
|
|
|
What role changes occur during compression in the Mary joke? inizia ad imparare
|
|
The AGENT role is superseded by the PATIENT role, while the BYSTANDER role is elevated to AGENT
|
|
|
What creates the humorous effect in the Mary joke? inizia ad imparare
|
|
The obvious incompatibility emerging in the structure of the blended space, particularly between the two actions (producing smoke by setting on fire vs smoking cigarettes)
|
|
|
How does the Mary joke comply with the unpacking principle? inizia ad imparare
|
|
It permits the unraveling of the development of the joke and invites the audience to take delight in Mary's verbal skills
|
|
|
What do advertising texts, riddles, and jokes share regarding their use of blending? inizia ad imparare
|
|
They all exploit the online quality of the emergent structure of the blend, though in different ways
|
|
|
What text types does subchapter 6.3 focus on for conceptual blending analysis? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Advertising texts, riddles, and jokes
|
|
|
Why are advertising texts, riddles, and jokes particularly interesting for conceptual blending analysis? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Because conceptual blending takes on a special form and achieves a special effect in these text types
|
|
|
What basic distinction did Roland Barthes make regarding text/picture relationships in advertising? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Anchorage (text provides disambiguation and deictic support for the picture) vs relay (text and image standing in a complementary relationship)
|
|
|
Which type of text/picture relationship does the subchapter focus on and why? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Relay, because it promises more interesting results
|
|
|
What specific advertisement is analyzed in the text? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Pantene shampoo and conditioner ad from Marie Claire (January 2000)
|
|
|
What are the two input spaces in the Pantene advertisement blend? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Lovers space (picture-based) and Pantene space (based on both pictures and text)
|
|
|
What cross-space identity mappings are used in the Pantene ad? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Identity between the two lovers and the two products, and between their spatial relations (close to each other, facing each other)
|
|
|
What emergent structure is created in the Pantene ad's blended space? inizia ad imparare
|
|
The prototypical interaction of the lovers is projected onto the relationship of the hair-care products, with the products as agents working together
|
|
|
What associations does the SETTING in the lovers space evoke? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Nature, freshness, purity, youth, and memories of a romantic meeting
|
|
|
How is the SETTING of the lovers space related to the PURPOSE of the Pantene space? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Through a forced cross-space mapping (identity or cause-effect) that is forced upon the reader by the ad's design
|
|
|
What headline is used in the Pantene ad and what does it suggest? inizia ad imparare
|
|
"Some things just work better together" - suggests that the shampoo and conditioner work better together, like the lovers
|
|
|
How do advertisers treat the indeterminacy of the emergent structure in ads like Pantene? inizia ad imparare
|
|
They exploit and even force the indeterminacy upon the reader, but hide the indeterminacy rather than lay it open
|
|
|
What riddle do Fauconnier and Turner use as a prime example of conceptual blending? inizia ad imparare
|
|
|
|
|
What is the scenario described in the Buddhist monk riddle? inizia ad imparare
|
|
A Buddhist monk begins at dawn walking up a mountain, reaches the top at sunset, meditates for several days, then walks back down at dawn and reaches the foot at sunset
|
|
|
What is the question asked in the Buddhist monk riddle? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Is there a place on the path that the monk occupies at the same hour of the day on the two separate journeys?
|
|
|
How does the blending approach solve the Buddhist monk riddle? inizia ad imparare
|
|
By imagining the monk walking up and down the mountain on the same day, creating a cross-space identity relation where he 'meets himself'
|
|
|
What cross-space relations are involved in the Buddhist monk blend? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Identity (the monk), place (the path), and time (the hour)
|
|
|
What is compressed in the Buddhist monk blend? inizia ad imparare
|
|
The person of the monk and the path are unified; the days of the two journeys are compressed, but not the hour of the imaginary meeting
|
|
|
What remains vague in the emergent structure of the Buddhist monk blend? inizia ad imparare
|
|
The exact position of the imaginary meeting point
|
|
|
What does the Buddhist monk riddle demonstrate about conceptual blending? inizia ad imparare
|
|
That conceptual blending can be a deliberately chosen problem-solving strategy, not just an unconscious process
|
|
|
What principle from Arthur Koestler's work is relevant for understanding jokes through blending? inizia ad imparare
|
|
The principle that jokes involve perceiving a situation or idea L in two self-consistent but habitually incompatible frames of reference M1 and M2
|
|
|
What child's joke is analyzed in the text? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Mother: "Why were you sent home early, Mary?" Mary: "Well, Mum, the boy next to me was smoking." Mother: "But if he was smoking, why were you sent home?" Mary: "I set him on fire."
|
|
|
What are the two input spaces in the Mary joke blend? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Cigarette-smoking space and setting-on-fire space
|
|
|
What encyclopaedic knowledge is included in input space 1 of the Mary joke? inizia ad imparare
|
|
That smoking is a common violation of school rules
|
|
|
What encyclopaedic knowledge is included in input space 2 of the Mary joke? inizia ad imparare
|
|
That burning objects smoke
|
|
|
What cross-space mappings are established in the Mary joke blend? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Identity (boy as AGENT in space 1 and PATIENT in space 2), cause-effect (setting fire ↔ smoking), and scale of offence
|
|
|
What role changes occur during compression in the Mary joke? inizia ad imparare
|
|
The AGENT role is superseded by the PATIENT role, while the BYSTANDER role is elevated to AGENT
|
|
|
What creates the humorous effect in the Mary joke? inizia ad imparare
|
|
The obvious incompatibility emerging in the structure of the blended space, particularly between the two actions (producing smoke by setting on fire vs smoking cigarettes)
|
|
|
How does the Mary joke comply with the unpacking principle? inizia ad imparare
|
|
It permits the unraveling of the development of the joke and invites the audience to take delight in Mary's verbal skills
|
|
|
What do advertising texts, riddles, and jokes share regarding their use of blending? inizia ad imparare
|
|
They all exploit the online quality of the emergent structure of the blend, though in different ways
|
|
|
Where did the notion of relevance as a governing principle of conceptual blending originate? inizia ad imparare
|
|
It was proposed as one of the governing principles of conceptual blending by Fauconnier and Turner
|
|
|
Who gave the pragmatic principle of relevance a cognitive turn? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Sperber and Wilson (1995)
|
|
|
What is the purpose of discussing Relevance Theory in this subchapter? inizia ad imparare
|
|
To select and simplify aspects akin to cognitive-linguistic thinking from which cognitive linguistics might benefit
|
|
|
What controls human understanding of verbal and non-verbal communicative events? inizia ad imparare
|
|
|
|
|
What dialogue example illustrates the search for relevance? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Peter: "Do you want some coffee?" Mary: "Coffee would keep me awake."
|
|
|
What is a cognitive environment according to Sperber and Wilson? inizia ad imparare
|
|
The set of all assumptions that are manifest to individuals because they can perceive them in their physical environment or infer them using cognitive abilities like memory and reasoning
|
|
|
What three types of assumptions make up a cognitive environment? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Assumptions that are stored in memory, currently perceived, or currently inferred
|
|
|
What is ostensive-inferential behaviour? inizia ad imparare
|
|
What is said together with gestures, facial expression, and other non-verbal cues
|
|
|
How does ostensive-inferential behaviour relate to figure/ground segregation? inizia ad imparare
|
|
The ostensive-inferential stimulus stands out as figure from the conceptual background of all potential assumptions that are not explicitly encoded
|
|
|
What non-linguistic example illustrates ostensive behaviour? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Peter leaning back on a park bench to draw Mary's attention to something
|
|
|
What two intentions are conveyed by ostensive-inferential behaviour? inizia ad imparare
|
|
The informative intention (to inform of something) and the communicative intention (to inform of the informative intention)
|
|
|
What example illustrates the evaluation of cognitive effects and processing effort? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Mary seeing an ice-cream vendor, a stroller, and William approaching on the park bench
|
|
|
What are the two extent conditions of relevance according to Sperber and Wilson? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Condition 1: An assumption is relevant to the extent that positive cognitive effects achieved when optimally processed are large; Condition 2: An assumption is relevant to the extent that the effort required to achieve these effects is small
|
|
|
How is cognitive efficiency defined? inizia ad imparare
|
|
An economic use of processing resources
|
|
|
What is the relationship between cognitive efficiency and cognitive economy? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Sperber and Wilson's cognitive efficiency is more comprehensive than Rosch's cognitive economy, but they share the principle of maximizing information with minimal effort
|
|
|
What cognitive-linguistic concepts could benefit from applying cognitive efficiency? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Gestalt/holistic perception, metonymies, and meaningful syntactic constructions
|
|
|
How do Relevance Theory and Conceptual-Blending Theory both address online cognitive processing? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Relevance Theory addresses it through assumptions sparked by ostensive acts; Conceptual-Blending Theory addresses it through mental input spaces, cognitive models, and vital relations
|
|
|
What utterance example is used to illustrate inferential assumptions? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Mary's utterance "It will get cold"
|
|
|
What are sets {A} and {I} in the "It will get cold" example? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Set {A}: preparative assumptions about Mary's physical presence and utterance; Set {I}: central assumptions about Mary's intentions and the meaning of her utterance
|
|
|
What is the difference between an implicature and an explicature? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Implicatures are inferred meanings that go beyond what is said; explicatures are explicit elaborations of what is said
|
|
|
What are the vital relations in Conceptual-Blending Theory? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Identity, space, time, property, cause-effect, and part-whole
|
|
|
How does Relevance Theory approach cognitive processing compared to Conceptual-Blending Theory? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Relevance Theory uses a systematic and logical approach with assumptions; Conceptual-Blending Theory uses a richer but vaguer approach with mental spaces and vital relations
|
|
|
What is the main difference in how the two theories view the relationship between language and general cognition? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Relevance Theory postulates a separate inferential module loosely related to general cognition; Conceptual-Blending Theory favours a holistic view where language structure and use are intertwined with general cognitive abilities
|
|
|
What is the "anything goes" criticism of Conceptual-Blending Theory? inizia ad imparare
|
|
That vital relations and compression lack a coherent system and hierarchy, leading to the criticism that anything can be blended
|
|
|
What are the governing principles of conceptual blending mentioned? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Relevance, topology, integration, unpacking
|
|
|
What are the potential benefits of cooperation between Relevance Theory and Conceptual-Blending Theory? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Vital relations and compression could benefit from Relevance Theory's systematic organization; Relevance Theory could overcome its disregard of interactional components; Relevance Theory could enrich its explanations with more 'soft' cognition
|
|
|
What three suggestions for developing cognitive linguistics are provided? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Extend idealized cognitive models to individualized cognitive environments; give figure/ground a speaker- and hearer-oriented interpretation; widen use of cognitive economy and efficiency
|
|
|
How should idealized cognitive models be extended according to the text? inizia ad imparare
|
|
To individualized cognitive environments that differ from person to person and situation to situation
|
|
|
What other cognitive-linguistic concepts should incorporate cognitive economy and efficiency? inizia ad imparare
|
|
Gestalt/holistic perception, metonymies, and meaningful syntactic constructions
|
|
|