La expresión del movimiento en inglés y en españoluna perspectiva lingüístico -cognitiva, tipológica y psicolingüística

  1. Cifuentes-Férez, Paula
Supervised by:
  1. Javier Valenzuela Manzanares Director

Defence university: Universidad de Murcia

Fecha de defensa: 18 July 2008

Committee:
  1. Antonio Barcelona Sánchez Chair
  2. Ana María Rojo López Secretary
  3. Iraide Ibarretxe Antuñano Committee member
  4. Anetta Kopecka Committee member
  5. Michele I. Feist Committee member
Department:
  1. English Philology

Type: Thesis

Abstract

La presente investigación se centra en la semántica de los verbos de movimiento en inglés y en castellano. La primera parte de la tesis ofrece un análisis sistemático y detallado de los lexicones verbales de movimiento en ambas lenguas desde un punto de vista contrastivo. En este análisis, los patrones generales de lexicalización, los verbos de sendero y los verbos de manera son los objetos de interés. La segunda parte de la tesis explora el subdominio del movimiento humano empleando paradigmas experimentales, proporcionando evidencia empírica a algunas de las observaciones derivadas del análisis lingüístico llevado a cabo en la primera parte de la tesis. ABSTRACT The present thesis addresses the semantics of English and Spanish motion verbs. In the first part of this dissertation, a systematic and detailed account of the semantics of English and Spanish motion verb lexicons from a contrastive point of view is provided. The patterns of general conflations are explored, as well as more subtle path notions and fine-grained manner information which can be conveyed by motion verbs in these two languages. Comparison between English and Spanish leads to the identification of both crosslinguistic similarities and differences. The second part of this thesis aims to investigate an important subdomain of motion, that of human locomotion, using experimental methods. These studies offer interesting insights into how English and Spanish organise their motion verb lexicons and into the complex semantics of human locomotion verbs. In addition, the findings provide empirical support for some of the observations from the linguistic analysis undertaken in the first part of this thesis