“…Within each of these two spatial domains, we defined several subtypes of interest inspired by theoretical studies of spatial terms (Landau & Jackendoff, 1993;Talmy, 1983), empirical studies showing crosslinguistic distinctions in the domains of containment (e.g., Bowerman & Choi, 2003;Narasimhan & Brown, 2009) and support (e.g., Gentner & Bowerman, 2009;Levinson & Wilkins, 2006), and infant studies documenting basic distinctions at the heart of early spatial event categories (Baillargeon et al, 2012). Even though some of these subtypes have so far only been documented in languages outside our sample, we believe that a closer look at spatial encoding patterns in English and Greek might reveal sensitivity to some of these distinctions in ways that would otherwise be hard to detect (see also G€ urcanli & Landau, 2008;Johanson & Papafragou, 2014, for support of this broad point). Even though some of these subtypes have so far only been documented in languages outside our sample, we believe that a closer look at spatial encoding patterns in English and Greek might reveal sensitivity to some of these distinctions in ways that would otherwise be hard to detect (see also G€ urcanli & Landau, 2008;Johanson & Papafragou, 2014, for support of this broad point).…”