2022
DOI: 10.1016/b978-0-12-823493-8.00006-7
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The noun-verb distinction

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…In general, nouns differ from verbs in the information level they can add in a sentence, but both cooperate to establish neural representations of objects and events (Faroqi-Shah, Sebastian, & Woude, 2018). For instance, nouns are related to objects, or subjects who perform actions, and can complete the meaning of actions, whereas verbs refer to actions and events, including also -in many languages-temporal information about the actions, and thus indicating the syntactic complexity of verbs (Geng et al, 2022; de Aguiar & Rofes, 2022). According to King and Gentner (2019), semantic context adaptations for verbs show to be driven by online adjustments whereas for nouns by sense-selection.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In general, nouns differ from verbs in the information level they can add in a sentence, but both cooperate to establish neural representations of objects and events (Faroqi-Shah, Sebastian, & Woude, 2018). For instance, nouns are related to objects, or subjects who perform actions, and can complete the meaning of actions, whereas verbs refer to actions and events, including also -in many languages-temporal information about the actions, and thus indicating the syntactic complexity of verbs (Geng et al, 2022; de Aguiar & Rofes, 2022). According to King and Gentner (2019), semantic context adaptations for verbs show to be driven by online adjustments whereas for nouns by sense-selection.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In general, nouns differ from verbs in the information level they can add in a sentence, but both cooperate to establish neural representations of objects and events [26]. For instance, nouns are related to objects, or subjects who perform actions, and can complete the meaning of actions whereas verbs refer to actions and events, including also -in many languages-temporal information about the actions, and thus indicating the syntactic complexity of verbs [27], [28]. According to King and Gentner [29], semantic context adaptations for verbs show to be driven by online adjustments whereas for nouns by sense-selection.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%