“…Like nouns, verbs are conceptually rich and provide semantic information in a sentence, but in addition, they provide relational information for integrating inflections and argument structures across the sentence (Hirsh-Pasek & Golinkoff, 2006; Langacker, 1987; Osterhout, Kim, & Kuperberg, In press). Verb processing engages distinctive neural activations compared to nouns as indexed by measures of ERPs and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in both children and adults (Federmeier, Segal, Lombrozo, & Kutas, 2000; Weber-Fox, Hart, & Spruill, 2006; Yokoyama et al, 2006). In a study utilizing class-ambiguous verbs/nouns (e.g., drink, smoke, hammer), Federmeier and colleagues (2000) noted that the role of words in a given context impacts the neural activations for processing that word.…”