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Introduction to Cognitive Linguistics
Published 2009-06-01“…This article introduces current developments in cognitive linguistics, presenting some principles which link cognition, language and interaction in utterances. …”
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Cognitive Linguistics and the Law
Published 2014-12-01“…Cognitive Linguistics (CL) believes that the study of language can be informative with regards to human thought processes. …”
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CONCEPTOLOGY AS A FORM OF COGNITIVE LINGUISTICS
Published 2017-03-01“…The article presents a brief description of Conceptology as a version of Cognitive linguistic and depicts its main distinctions from Contensive and Cognitive (in narrow sense) linguistics as a form of expression of Russian mentality in its basic manifestations. …”
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Some reflections on the origins of cognitive linguistics
Published 1999-05-01“…The purpose of these notes is to contribute to the understanding of the intellectual and scientific origins of Cognitive Linguistics (CL); it is not, therefore, a history, even partial and incomplete, of CL; neither does it offer any exhaustive consideration of all the factors, influences, linguistic and psychological models, or of all the linguists that have contributed to the birth and development of the discipiline, an enterprise that is probably premature.…”
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COGNITIVE LINGUISTICS IN SECOND LANGUAGE AQUISITION
Published 2013-10-01Subjects: “…cognitive linguistics…”
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The seventh International Congress on Cognitive Linguistics
Published 2017-12-01Get full text
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COGNITIVE LINGUISTICS AS A DEVELOPMENT OF FORMAL LINGUISTICS
Published 2019-03-01Get full text
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Introduction to the Topical Issue “Cognitive Linguistics and Theology”
Published 2018-10-01Get full text
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FICTIVE MOTION: A COGNITIVE LINGUISTICS APPROACH
Published 2020-01-01“…Even though these sentences contain verbs of motion, actual motion does not take place. Cognitive linguists claim that such sentences imply a sense of motion and term it – <em>fictive motion</em> (Talmy), <em>abstract motion</em> (Langacker) or <em>subjective motion</em> (Matsumoto). …”
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FICTIVE MOTION: A COGNITIVE LINGUISTICS APPROACH
Published 2019-11-01“…Even though these sentences contain verbs of motion, actual motion does not take place. Cognitive linguists claim that such sentences imply a sense of motion and term it – fictive motion (Talmy), abstract motion (Langacker) or subjective motion (Matsumoto). …”
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