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The encoding of motion events in the L2 Italian of Czech, Slovak, and American English users

MOCCIARO, Egle; Magdaléna NAHÁLKOVÁ; Russi CINZIA and Luongo SILVIA

Basic information

Original name

The encoding of motion events in the L2 Italian of Czech, Slovak, and American English users

Authors

MOCCIARO, Egle; Magdaléna NAHÁLKOVÁ; Russi CINZIA and Luongo SILVIA

Edition

10th International Conference of the German Cognitive Linguistics Association, theme session on Second language learning and teaching of motion event constructions”, 4-6.11.2024, Osnabrück (Germany), 2024

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Presentations at conferences

Country of publisher

Germany

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

Organization

Filozofická fakulta – Repository – Repository
Changed: 29/1/2025 00:51, RNDr. Daniel Jakubík

Abstract

V originále

amp; Slobin 1994; Slobin 2004; among many others). This text consists of 29 black-and-white drawings showing the adventures of a child and his dog searching for a frog that has run away from them. The visualizations of the plot provide the reader ample space for a detailed description of what is happening (Slobin 2004). Concerning the phenomenon under analysis (i.e., verbs denoting motion events), we selected 20 images which clearly illustrate a change in movement. During class, students were first given five minutes to independently reconstruct the story; then, while they continued to observe the selected images, students were asked by the interviewers questions about the images using verbs in the past tense only; the basic starting question was “Describe what you think happened and why”. The students’ answers were audio recorded, subject to informed consent, then transcribed into text for analysis. Preliminary analysis of the data shows, for both English-speaking and Czech/Slovak-speaking learners, cases of correct auxiliary selection, cases of overgeneralisation of one at the expense of the other, and cases of omission, according to a distribution that partly reflects the characteristics of the learners' respective L1s, and partly could be explained by the characteristics of the motion event involved.

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