1Bobrow,S.& S.Bell.1973.On catching on to idiomatic expressions[J].Memory and Cognition (1).
2Croft,W.& Cruse,A.2004.Cognitive Linguistics[M].Cambridge:Cambridge University Press.
3Gibbs,R.W.1980.Spilling the beans on understanding and memory for idioms in conversation[J].Memory and Cognition (8).
4Smith,L.& Samuelson,L.1997.Perceiving and Remembering:Category,stability,variability and development[A].In L.koen& D.shanks (eds.).Knowledge,Concepts and Categories[C].Hove:Psychology Press.
4Fillmore, Charles J. Frame semantics[A]. In Linguistic Society of Korea, (ed.). Linguistics in the Morning Calm[C]. 1982:111 138.
5Fillmore, Charles J. Frames and the semantics of understanding [J].Quaderni di Semantica,1985,6(2) :222 53.
6Fillmore, Charles J. The case for case[A]. In E. Bach and R. T.Harms (eds.). Universals in Linguistic Theory[C]. New York:Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1968 : 1-88.
7Fillmore, Charles J. An alternative to checklist theories of meaning[A]. Proceedings of the First Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society[C]. In Cathy Cogen et al (ed.). Berkeley: Berkeley Linguisties Society, 1975 : 123-131.
8Goldberg, Adele. Constructions: A Construction Grammar Approach to Argument Structure[M]. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1995.
9Johnson C., Fillmore C, Wood E, Ruppenhofer J, Urban M, Petruck M. & Baker C. The FrameNet project : tools for lexicon building. Manuscript[R]. Berkeley, CA, International Computer Science Institute, 2001.
10Lakoff, George. Women, Fire and Dangerous Things: What Categories Reveal about the Mind[M]. Chleago: Chicago University Press, 1987.