Cognitive Linguistics Investigations: Across Languages, Fields and Philosophical BoundariesJune Luchjenbroers John Benjamins, 2006 - 334 Seiten The total body of papers presented in this volume captures research across a variety of languages and language groups, to show how particular elements of linguistic description draw on otherwise separate aspects (or fields) of linguistic investigation. As such, this volume captures a diversity of research interest from the field of cognitive linguistics. These areas include: lexical semantics, cognitive grammar, metaphor, prototypes, pragmatics, narrative and discourse, computational and translation models; and are considered within the contexts of: language change, child language acquisition, language and culture, grammatical features and word order and gesture. Despite possible differences in philosophical approach to the role of language in cognitive tasks, these papers are similar in a fundamental way: they all share a commitment to the view that human categorization involves mental concepts that have fuzzy boundaries and are culturally and situation-based. |
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... Palmer and Arin ( 1999 ) and Palmer and Woodman ( 1999 ) . A third type of complex category is the polycentric category as proposed by Palmer and Woodman ( 1999 ) . A polycentric category has multiple central cate- gories , each of ...
... Palmer and Arin ( 1999 ) and Palmer and Woodman ( 1999 ) . A third type of complex category is the polycentric category as proposed by Palmer and Woodman ( 1999 ) . A polycentric category has multiple central cate- gories , each of ...
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... Palmer ( 1996 ) and Palmer and Arin ( 1999 ) proposed that the seman- tics of classifiers in Shona and other Bantu systems are governed by salient ritual scenarios that are more culturally specific and richer than the stereotypes and ...
... Palmer ( 1996 ) and Palmer and Arin ( 1999 ) proposed that the seman- tics of classifiers in Shona and other Bantu systems are governed by salient ritual scenarios that are more culturally specific and richer than the stereotypes and ...
Seite 43
... Palmer , Gary ( 2003 ) . Metonymy and polysemy in the Tagalog voicing prefix PAG- . In Gene Casad & Gary B. Palmer ( Eds . ) , Cognitive Linguistics and Non - Indo - European languages ( pp . 193-222 ) . Berlin : Mouton de Gruyter ...
... Palmer , Gary ( 2003 ) . Metonymy and polysemy in the Tagalog voicing prefix PAG- . In Gene Casad & Gary B. Palmer ( Eds . ) , Cognitive Linguistics and Non - Indo - European languages ( pp . 193-222 ) . Berlin : Mouton de Gruyter ...
Inhalt
CHAPTER | 1 |
Computational models and conceptual mappings | 6 |
CHAPTER | 8 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Cognitive Linguistics Investigations: Across languages, fields and ... June Luchjenbroers Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2006 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
active agency analysis Anna Wierzbicka approach Bantu Cambridge civil disobedience classifiers clause Cognitive Grammar cognitive linguistics conceptual blending conceptual metaphors conceptual structure connectionist construal construction context cross-linguistic cryptotype cultural linguistics cultural models depictions discourse discussion domain Dyirbal elements emotional English episode ergative event example F-space fictive motion Figure FM sentences focus function words gesture Goddard grammatical grammatical voice ikhlas input internal state predicates Japanese John Benjamins KADIN kız Lakoff Langacker lexical items MacWhinney mappings meaning mental spaces merger metaphor metonymy motion verbs Mouton de Gruyter natural semantic metalanguage non-FM sentences noun noun class omoiyari overgeneralization Palmer paper participants patterns pauses phonological phrase polycentric category polysemy prefix prepositions prototype reference represent representation role scenarios schemas Shona spatial speaker specific syntactic Tagalog theory tion touch trajectors University Press verbal explication voting Wierzbicka Eds ZERO