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52(top 20%)
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Top Articles

#TitleJournalYearCitations
1Chapter 10 Frame semanticsCognitive Linguistics Research2006137
2Assessing the cognitive linguistic enterpriseCognitive Linguistics Research1999118
3Image schemas in Cognitive Linguistics: IntroductionCognitive Linguistics Research2005105
4Image schemas: From linguistic analysis to neural groundingCognitive Linguistics Research2005103
5The psychological status of image schemasCognitive Linguistics Research200592
6The philosophical significance of image schemasCognitive Linguistics Research200589
7Word meaning, sentence meaning, and syntactic meaningCognitive Linguistics Research200385
8Meaning potentials and context: Some consequences for the analysis of variation in meaningCognitive Linguistics Research200384
9Compositionality and blending: semantic composition in a cognitively realistic frameworkCognitive Linguistics Research199981
10Grounding, mapping, and acts of meaningCognitive Linguistics Research199977
11Image schemas and perception: Refining a definitionCognitive Linguistics Research200558
12From causatives to passives: A passage in some East and Southeast Asian languagesCognitive Linguistics Research200355
13What´s in a schema? Bodily mimesis and the grounding of languageCognitive Linguistics Research200552
14Introduction A rough guide to Cognitive LinguisticsCognitive Linguistics Research200650
15The fundamental system of spatial schemas in languageCognitive Linguistics Research200547
16Image schemata in the brainCognitive Linguistics Research200545
17Image schemas and verbal synaesthesiaCognitive Linguistics Research200545
18Methods and generalizationsCognitive Linguistics Research199944
19Image schemas and gestureCognitive Linguistics Research200541
20Polysemy or generality? Mu.Cognitive Linguistics Research200340
21National variation in the use of er “there”. Regional and diachronic constraints on cognitive explanationsCognitive Linguistics Research200839
22Chapter 6 Conceptual metaphorCognitive Linguistics Research200638
23How to build a baby: III. Image schemas and the transition to verbal thoughtCognitive Linguistics Research200536
24Multimodal spatial representation: On the semantic unity of overCognitive Linguistics Research200536
25Culture regained: Situated and compound image schemasCognitive Linguistics Research200535
26Chapter 4 Prototype theoryCognitive Linguistics Research200633
27Some contributions of typology to cognitive linguistics and vice versaCognitive Linguistics Research199930
28Channel and constructional meaning: A collostructional case studyCognitive Linguistics Research200829
29Towards a pragmatic model of cognitive onomasiologyCognitive Linguistics Research200328
30Style-shifting and shifting styles: A socio-cognitive approach to lectal variationCognitive Linguistics Research200828
31Methodological issues in corpus-based Cognitive LinguisticsCognitive Linguistics Research200826
32Chapter 9 Mental spacesCognitive Linguistics Research200624
33Holistic spatial semantics of ThaiCognitive Linguistics Research200321
34Chapter 1 Cognitive GrammarCognitive Linguistics Research200620
35Dynamic patterns of CONTAINMENTCognitive Linguistics Research200519
36Force-dynamic dimensions of rhetorical effectCognitive Linguistics Research200516
37Growth of a lexical network: Nine English prepositions in acquisitionCognitive Linguistics Research200315
38A prototype account of the development of delimitative po- in RussianCognitive Linguistics Research200715
39Rationalist or romantic model in globalisation?Cognitive Linguistics Research200814
40Chapter 12 Usage-based linguisticsCognitive Linguistics Research200614
41Prototypes, stereotypes, and semantic normsCognitive Linguistics Research200813
42A nation is a territory with one culture and one language: The role of metaphorical folk models in language policy debatesCognitive Linguistics Research200813
43Cultural models of Home in Aboriginal children’s EnglishCognitive Linguistics Research200811
44A Cognitive Linguistic approach to the cultures of World Englishes: The emergence of a new modelCognitive Linguistics Research200811
45Containment, support, and linguistic relativityCognitive Linguistics Research200310
46Chapter 7 Image schemaCognitive Linguistics Research200610
47Idealist and empiricist tendencies in cognitive semanticsCognitive Linguistics Research19999
48Image schemas and category coherence: The case of the Portuguese verb deixarCognitive Linguistics Research20039
49The bodily dimension of meaning in Chinese: what do we do and mean with “hands”?*Cognitive Linguistics Research20038
50Introduction. Cognitive Sociolinguistics: Rationale, methods and scopeCognitive Linguistics Research20088