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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 November 2008
Forty-eight adult subjects from the northeastern United States were evaluated for their productive use of the causative verbs bring and take. Results revealed that approximately one-fourth of the subjects employed the terms contrastively and consistent with standard use whereas one-third employed a bring over-extension strategy seeming to impute a ‘carry’ meaning to the term. The remaining subjects, although evidencing some take use. did not routinely employ standard, deictically based source or goal distinctions. The validity of the findings was tested in two additional experiments. The nature of these alternative productive strategies and their implications are discussed.