Do ELF users construe a motion event differently when addressing a native and a non-native speaker?
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.58221/mosp.v118i3.22975Keywords:
English as a lingua franca, motion event, Talmy's typology, construal, addressing native and non-native speakersAbstract
Previous research (Strugielska & Piątkowska, 2021) on English as a lingua franca (ELF) from the perspective of Talmy’s typological distinction between S- and V-languages has demonstrated that ELF reveals characteristics of both S- and V-languages. In the present paper we extend this research and examine whether ELF users construe a motion event differently when addressing a native speaker and a non-native speaker of English, a context not discussed before (Hall, 2018). Furthermore, the latest research (Montero-Melis, 2021) on motion events encourages investigation into differences in the construal of motion events across speakers of different languages. Basing on the findings of a qualitative pilot study among Polish users of English, we show that in the narratives addressed to both a native and a non-native speaker of English we may detect features typical of S- and V-languages. However, the results reveal that the nature of V-type framing is slightly different in the two types of texts.
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Copyright (c) 2024 Katarzyna Piątkowska, Ariadna Strugielska
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
The full license and copyright terms for Moderna Språk can be found under the journal's Open Access Policy.