Studies in lexicogrammar : theory and applications /
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
---|---|
Otros Autores: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam ; Phildelphia :
John Benjamins Publishing Company,
[2016]
|
Colección: | Human cognitive processing ;
v. 54. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Intro
- Studies in Lexicogrammar
- Editorial page
- Title page
- LCC data
- Table of contents
- Preface
- Introduction: Theoretical, methodological, and practical problems in the study of lexicogrammar
- 1. Introduction
- 2. An overview of approaches to lexicogrammar
- 2.1 The architecture of language: Non-cognitivist approaches
- 2.2 The architecture of language: Cognitive linguistic approaches
- 2.3 Generativist models and cognitive linguistic models: Differences and commonalities
- 3. The contributions in the present volume
- 4. Contributions to the volume
- 4.1 Theoretical and methodological issues
- 4.2 The semantics and pragmatics of morphosyntactic constructions
- 4.3 Figuration and lexicogrammar structure
- 4.4 Morphological and phonological structure
- 5. Directions for future research
- References
- Part I. Theoretical and methodological issues
- Toward an integrated view of structure, processing, and discourse
- 1. Overview
- 2. "Classical" CG
- 3. Architecture
- 3.1 Interactive substrate
- 3.2 Discursive substrate
- 4. Descriptive and discursive organization
- 5. Think globally, act locally
- 6. Conclusion
- References
- Looking into introspection
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Folk theories, expert theories and writing
- 2.1 Intuitions about linguistic units: Sentences
- 2.2 Intuitions about linguistic units: Phonemes
- 2.3 Intuitions about linguistic units: Words
- 2.4 Grammaticality judgments
- 3. Literary dialogue and intuitions about spoken language
- 4. Coming out of the linguistic closet
- 5. Conclusion
- References
- Virtual lexicogrammar
- 1. Setting the scene
- 2. Symbolic semantics in the lexicon-grammar continuum
- 3. The linguistic sign: From semiosis to metonymy
- 4. Virtuality in Langacker
- 5. Virtuality in the history of ideas
- 6. The virtuality of embodied cognition.
- 7. Conclusion: Virtual lexicon, grammar, and lexicogrammar
- References
- Part II. The semantics and pragmatics of morphosyntactic constructions
- From the meaning of the concrete noun to its grammatical property and back
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The classical approach to the count-mass distinction
- 3. The Cognitive Grammar contribution
- 3.1 The factors influencing the extent of meaning
- 3.2 The gradation of meaning
- 3.3 The CG approach to countability and uncountability
- 3.4 Construal
- 4. The Cognitive Grammar-based analysis
- 5. Observations and discussion
- References
- Dictionaries
- What? You and me get together? The place of the Incredulity Response Construction
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Differences between lexical and grammatical words
- 2.1 Encyclopedic meanings
- 2.2 Generality
- 2.3 Access to conscious reflection
- 2.4 Construal, non-truth conditionality
- 2.5 Subjectification
- 2.6 Continuum and division
- 3. The Incredulity Response Construction
- 3.1 General characterization
- 3.2 Semantics
- 3.3 Arguments in favor of an iconic binary analysis
- 4. Conclusions
- References
- The binding hierarchy and infinitival complementation in English and in Polish
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The binding hierarchy of clausal complementation (Givón 1980, 2001)
- 3. English and Polish complement taking predicates: A contrastive analysis
- 3.1 Verbs of desire and intention
- 3.2 Communication verbs
- 3.3 Causation verbs
- 3.4 Verbs of recall
- 4. Summary and conclusions
- References
- Dictionaries
- Corpora
- The conceptual structure of reflexivity in The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, Manuscript E
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Reflexivity as a conceptual relation
- 3. Old English reflexive pronouns
- 4. The data, results, and discussion
- 4.1 Direct reflexive situations
- 4.2 The indirect reflexive situation type.
- 4.3 Logophoric reflexives
- 5. Conclusions
- References
- Internet sources
- Part III. Figuration and lexicogrammatical structure
- Lexical and grammatical dimensions of metaphor: A Cognitive Grammar perspective
- 1. A Cognitive Grammar view on metaphor
- 2. The analysis
- 2.1 A metaphorical extension of lumière ('light')
- 2.2 Metaphorical extensions of items referring to a relatively large amount of light
- 2.3 Metaphorical extensions of items referring to a relatively small amount of light
- 2.4 A pattern
- 3. Conclusions
- References
- Dictionaries
- The interplay of metaphor and metonymy in English noun+noun compounds
- 1. Introduction
- 2. An overview of compounding in English
- 3. Conceptual metaphor in noun+noun compounds
- 4. Conceptual metonymy in noun+noun compounds
- 5. Metaphtonymy in noun+noun compounds
- 5.1 Metaphor-metonymy relationships in noun+noun compounds according to Benczes
- 5.2 Ruiz de Mendoza and Diez's typology of metaphor-metonymy interaction patterns
- 5.3 Metonymical expansions and reductions of metaphors in noun+noun compounds
- 6. Conclusions
- References
- Sources
- Towards an experientially-based classification of motion situations
- 1. Introduction
- the inseparability of force and motion in our everyday experienc
- 2. The concept of motion in Force Dynamics
- 3. The concept of force in the taxonomy of motion events
- 4. Force-motion analysis of metaphors of motion
- 5. Summary and conclusion
- Appendix
- References
- Space and time in medium-mediated expressions of distance
- 1. Introduction
- 2. (Dis)analogies in the cognition of space and time
- 3. (A)symmetry in the cognition of space and time
- 4. Space and time in medium-mediated expressions of distance
- 4.1 Methodology of research
- 5. Representations of motion-framed distance for the medium of motion.
- 6. Conclusions
- References
- Part IV. Morphological and phonological structure
- Headedness of coordinate compounds in Polish and English
- 1. Introduction
- 2. The notion of the head
- 3. Selected compound classifications
- 4. Coordinate endocentric compounds in English
- 5. Coordinate endocentric compounds in Polish
- 6. Attributive compounds in English and Polish
- 7. Coordinate compounds at the border of syntax and morphology
- 8. Conclusion
- References
- Word-specific phonology: The impact of token frequency and base transparency
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Base transparency and Finnish assibilation
- 3. The suffix -ist-a/-yst-a
- 4. The diminutive suffix -ek
- 5. Conclusion
- References
- Name index
- Subject index.