2011
DOI: 10.1016/j.pragma.2010.10.012
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Spanish subject pronoun usage and verb semantics revisited: First and second person singular subject pronouns and focusing of attention in spoken Peninsular Spanish

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Cited by 63 publications
(58 citation statements)
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“…It appears that a random effects analysis using a lexical frequency approach can help us provide a more detailed account of how verbs condition SPE. Moreover, these results concur with recent findings (Posio 2011(Posio , 2015Orozco 2015, under review;Orozco et al 2014) in providing mounting evidence that despite four decades of research, we are yet to know the real effects of the verb on SPE. It appears that by using analyses that take into account the configuration of the corpus at hand, and, most importantly, lexical frequency, we will be able to obtain more conclusive answers as to the effects of the verb on SPE and, perhaps, other linguistic variables.…”
Section: Another Take At the Effects Of The Verb On Spe Using Lexicalsupporting
confidence: 90%
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“…It appears that a random effects analysis using a lexical frequency approach can help us provide a more detailed account of how verbs condition SPE. Moreover, these results concur with recent findings (Posio 2011(Posio , 2015Orozco 2015, under review;Orozco et al 2014) in providing mounting evidence that despite four decades of research, we are yet to know the real effects of the verb on SPE. It appears that by using analyses that take into account the configuration of the corpus at hand, and, most importantly, lexical frequency, we will be able to obtain more conclusive answers as to the effects of the verb on SPE and, perhaps, other linguistic variables.…”
Section: Another Take At the Effects Of The Verb On Spe Using Lexicalsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…On the other hand, the second person singular and all plural grammatical persons combined favor null subjects with probability values of .44 and .21, respectively. These findings are largely commensurate with the wide-ranging tendency (Abreu 2009(Abreu , 2012Bayley & Pease-Álvarez 1997;Carvalho & Child 2011;Erker & Guy 2012;Flores-Ferrán 2002Orozco 2015, under review;Otheguy, Zentella, & Livert 2007;Posio 2011;Ortiz López 2011, among others) that singular SPPs occur more frequently as overt subjects than plural pronouns.…”
Section: Grammatical Person and Number Of The Subjectsupporting
confidence: 69%
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“…These data support that features of lower transitivity (the absence of an object or non-individuated/inanimate objects, imperfective aspect, verbs that refer to non-energetic events; Hopper & Thompson 1980) favor <spp Verb>, whereas features typical of higher transitivity favor <Verb> (Posio 2011). This pattern is highly favorable to the view that speakers prefer <Verb> when relatively more attention is focused on the event, whereas they prefer <spp Verb> when relatively more attention is focused on the subject, as hypothesis 1 predicts.…”
supporting
confidence: 71%