SPACE LEXICALIZED: ITS LINGUISTIC IMPACTS IN ENGLISH AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR EFL LEARNING

Our sense of space is part of our experiential universals. However, the incorporation of space into words differs across languages. This paper argues that "space” is lexicalized in English but not in Indonesian. English encodes the sense of location and direction into adverbial particles, prod...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: A. Effendi Kadarisman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association for the Teaching of English as a Foreign Language in Indonesia (TEFLIN) 2015-08-01
Series:TEFLIN Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.teflin.org/index.php/journal/article/view/30
Description
Summary:Our sense of space is part of our experiential universals. However, the incorporation of space into words differs across languages. This paper argues that "space” is lexicalized in English but not in Indonesian. English encodes the sense of location and direction into adverbial particles, producing language-specific xpressions. Together with prepositions, adverbial particles also combine with simple verbs producing phrasal verbsand making a highly familiar verb expand itself into a huge range of meanings. Furthermore, the unique syntactic behavior of phrasal verbs is assumed to be the motivation for the phenomenon of "prepositional stranding” in English. The enormous presence of adverbial particles in English and their absence in Indonesian could be problematic for Indonesian EFL learners. This problem can be viewed from two perspectives: inward & outward.
ISSN:0215-773X
2356-2641