An outline of English lexicology : lexical structure, word semantics, and word-formation /
Outline of English Lexicology: Lexical Structure, Word Semantics and Word Formation.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Tübingen [Germany] :
Max Niemeyer,
1992.
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Edición: | 2nd ed. |
Colección: | Forschung & Studium Anglistik ;
3. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Preface; Acknowledgements; Chapter I. General Problems. Words, Words, Words; 1.1. Introduction; 1.2. The Structure of the English Lexicon; 1.3. Varieties of English; 1.4. Dictionaries of English; Chapter II. The Linguistic Sign. What's in a Word?; 2.1. Models of the Sign; 2.1.1. Saussure's Approach; 2.1.2. Ogden and Richards's Semiotic Triangle
- 2.1.3. Bühler's Organon Model
- 2.2. The Meaning of Signs and Kinds of 'Meaning'; 2.2.1. Language and Reality; 2.2.2. Approaches to Semantics; 2.2.3. Denotation and Reference; 2.2.4. Other Kinds of Meaning; 2.2.5. Connotations and Markedness.
- 2.3. Morpheme, Word, Lexeme2.3.1. The Classification of Morphemes; 2.3.2. The Ambiguity of 'Word'; 2.3.3. Lexemes, Lexical Items, and Word-Forms; Chapter III. The Internal Structure of Words. Word-Formation, Features, and Componential Analysis; 3.1. Polysemy, Lexical Entries, and Sememes; 3.2. Morphological Structure: Simple vs. Complex Lexemes; 3.2.1. Compounds; 3.2.2. Suffixal and Zero-Derivatives; 3.2.3. Nominalizations; 3.2.4. Word-Formation Processes and Productivity; 3.2.5. Lexicalization and Idioms; 3.3. The Semantic Structure of Words: Componential Analysis and Semantic Features.
- 3.3.1. Semantic Decomposition and its Justification3.3.2. A Typology of Features; 3.3.3. Feature Semantics vs. Prototype Semantics: an Alternative?; 3.3.4. Relations between Components; 3.4. Lexical Rules and Semantic Processes; 3.4.1. Rules and Tendencies; 3.4.2. Metaphor, Metonymy, and Categorization; Chapter IV. The Structure of the Lexicon. Relations between Words; 4.1. Units, Classes, and Relations; 4.1.1. Lexical Entry and Lexical Unit; 4.1.2. Word Classes and Semantic Classes; 4.2. Paradigmatic Relations; 4.2.1. Homonymy vs. Polysemy; 4.2.2. Zero-Derivation and Word Metaphors.
- 4.2.3. Lexical Relations, Sense-Relations, and Lexical Semantics4.2.3.1. Synonymy; 4.2.3.2. Hyponymy and Incompatibility; 4.2.3.3. Complementarity, Antonymy, and Converseness; 4.2.3.4. Contrast and Opposition: Recent Work; 4.2.4. Lexical Fields and Hierarchies; 4.2.5. Association and Lexical Sets; 4.3. Syntagmatic Relations; 4.3.1. Various Approaches; 4.3.2. Selection Restrictions and Projection Rules; 4.3.3. Transfer Features and Metaphor; 4.3.4. Lexical Solidarities; 4.3.5. Collocation as a Neutral Syntagma; Chapter V. The Function of Words. Co-Text, Context, and the Mental Lexicon.
- 5.1. Words in Context5.1.1. The Functions of Word-Formation in Texts; 5.1.2. Monosemization as the Resolution of Polysemy; 5.1.3. Words at Work; 5.2. Words in the Mind; 5.2.1. Categorization and Psychology; 5.2.2. The Structuring of the Universe; Chapter VI. Summary and Conclusions; 6.1. Summary; 6.2. Conclusions; 6.2.1. Specific Results; 6.2.2. General Conclusions and Consequences; Abbreviations; Dictionaries; Bibliography; Index of Subjects; Index of Persons.