Book contents
- Constituent Order in Language and Thought
- Constituent Order in Language and Thought
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Chapter 1 Introduction
- Chapter 2 Kaqchikel Mayan
- Chapter 3 Word Order Preference in Sentence Comprehension I: Behavioral Studies
- Chapter 4 Word Order Preference in Sentence Comprehension II: fMRI Studies
- Chapter 5 Word Order Preference in Sentence Comprehension III: ERP Studies without Context
- Chapter 6 Word Order Preference in Sentence Comprehension IV: ERP Studies with Context
- Chapter 7 Basic Word Order in Language and Natural Order of Thought
- Chapter 8 Constituent Order Preference in Event Representation
- Chapter 9 Word Order Preference in Sentence Production I: Production Frequency
- Chapter 10 Word Order Preference in Sentence Production II: Time Course and Cognitive Load
- Chapter 11 Grammatical Processing and Event Apprehension
- Chapter 12 Syntactic Structure of Kaqchikel Revisited
- Chapter 13 Syntax and Processing Load
- Chapter 14 Concluding Remarks
- Book part
- References
- Index
Chapter 1 - Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 January 2023
- Constituent Order in Language and Thought
- Constituent Order in Language and Thought
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Chapter 1 Introduction
- Chapter 2 Kaqchikel Mayan
- Chapter 3 Word Order Preference in Sentence Comprehension I: Behavioral Studies
- Chapter 4 Word Order Preference in Sentence Comprehension II: fMRI Studies
- Chapter 5 Word Order Preference in Sentence Comprehension III: ERP Studies without Context
- Chapter 6 Word Order Preference in Sentence Comprehension IV: ERP Studies with Context
- Chapter 7 Basic Word Order in Language and Natural Order of Thought
- Chapter 8 Constituent Order Preference in Event Representation
- Chapter 9 Word Order Preference in Sentence Production I: Production Frequency
- Chapter 10 Word Order Preference in Sentence Production II: Time Course and Cognitive Load
- Chapter 11 Grammatical Processing and Event Apprehension
- Chapter 12 Syntactic Structure of Kaqchikel Revisited
- Chapter 13 Syntax and Processing Load
- Chapter 14 Concluding Remarks
- Book part
- References
- Index
Summary
In many flexible word order languages, sentences with a transitive verb (V) in which the subject (S) precedes the object (O) (SO word order = SOV, SVO, VSO) are reported to be “preferred” over those in which the opposite occurs (OS word order= OSV, OVS, VOS). For example, SO sentences are easier to process and are produced more frequently than OS sentences in Finnish, Japanese, Sinhalese, and others. This empirical evidence of the preference for SO word order, however, is not conclusive, because it comes exclusively from SO languages (i.e., languages in which SO is the syntactically simplest word order). It is therefore necessary to study OS languages (i.e., languages in which OS is the syntactically simplest word order) to investigate whether the same preference holds. This book reports on several experiments we have conducted, to this end, on Kaqchikel (Mayan, Guatemala) and Seediq (Austronesian, Taiwan), whose syntactically basic word order is VOS.
Keywords
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Constituent Order in Language and ThoughtA Case Study in Field-Based Psycholinguistics, pp. 1 - 14Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023