Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
No preposition required. The role of prepositions for the understanding of spatial relations in language acquisition
-
Katharina J. Rohlfing
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Acknowledgements v
- List of Contributors vii
- Contents ix
- Contents of volume II xi
- Introduction xiii
-
Section 1: Cognitive approaches to the English tense system
- Cognitive linguistics, language pedagogy, and the English present tense 3
- Pretend play: trial ground for the simple present 41
- The relation between experience, conceptual structure and meaning: non-temporal uses of tense and language teaching 63
-
Section 2: Facets of prototypes in grammatical constructions
- Grammatical constructions and their discourse origins: prototype or family resemblance? 109
- Transitivity parameter and prominence typology: a cross-linguistic study 131
-
Section 3: Neurocognitive and cognitive issues of language acquisition in general
- Learning syntax - a neurocognitive approach 167
- Conceptual primes in early language development 193
- No preposition required. The role of prepositions for the understanding of spatial relations in language acquisition 229
- The ‘Graded Salience Hypothesis’ in second language acquisition 249
- Subject Index 271
- 275-276 275
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Acknowledgements v
- List of Contributors vii
- Contents ix
- Contents of volume II xi
- Introduction xiii
-
Section 1: Cognitive approaches to the English tense system
- Cognitive linguistics, language pedagogy, and the English present tense 3
- Pretend play: trial ground for the simple present 41
- The relation between experience, conceptual structure and meaning: non-temporal uses of tense and language teaching 63
-
Section 2: Facets of prototypes in grammatical constructions
- Grammatical constructions and their discourse origins: prototype or family resemblance? 109
- Transitivity parameter and prominence typology: a cross-linguistic study 131
-
Section 3: Neurocognitive and cognitive issues of language acquisition in general
- Learning syntax - a neurocognitive approach 167
- Conceptual primes in early language development 193
- No preposition required. The role of prepositions for the understanding of spatial relations in language acquisition 229
- The ‘Graded Salience Hypothesis’ in second language acquisition 249
- Subject Index 271
- 275-276 275