“…A number of explanations have been proposed, including that verbs are more syntactically and morphologically complex than nouns (see Druks, 2002;Kauschke & Stenneken, 2008) and that verbs have broader, more context-dependent meanings than nouns (compare 'catch a ball', 'catch a cold' vs. 'throw a ball', 'bounce a ball') (e.g., Earles & Kersten, 2016;Gentner & Boroditsky, 2001;Maguire, Hirsh-Pasek & Golinkoff, 2006). A commonly cited explanation for these differences is that nouns are inherently more concrete than verbs (e.g., Barber, Kousta, Otten & Vigliocco, 2010;Bird et al, 2000;Bogka, Masterson, Druks, Fragkioudaki, Chatziprokopiou & Economou, 2003;Bourassa & Besner, 1994;Chiarello et al, 2002;Druks, 2002;Kambanaros & Grohmann, 2015;Kauschke & Stenneken, 2008;Ma, Golinkoff, Hirsh-Pasek, McDonough & Tardif, 2009;Mätzig et al, 2009;McDonough et al, 2011;Vigliocco et al, 2011). Although nouns and verbs vary in their concreteness (Bird et al, 2000;Kambanaros, 2009;Xu, Kang & Guo, 2016), few studies of language processing in healthy adults have considered concreteness and grammatical class simultaneously.…”