The semantics of polysemy : reading meaning in English and Warlpiri /

This book, addressed primarily to students and researchers in semantics, cognitive linguistics, English, and Australian languages, is a comparative study of the polysemy patterns displayed by percussion/impact ('hitting') verbs in English and Warlpiri (Pama-Nyungan, Central Australia). The...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Riemer, Nick.
Corporate Authors: De Gruyter.
Published: De Gruyter Mouton,
Publisher Address: Berlin ;Boston :
Publication Dates: [2008]
©2005
Literature type: eBook
Language: English
Series: Cognitive linguistics research [clr] ; 30
Subjects:
Online Access: http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110197556
http://www.degruyter.com/doc/cover/9783110197556.jpg
Summary: This book, addressed primarily to students and researchers in semantics, cognitive linguistics, English, and Australian languages, is a comparative study of the polysemy patterns displayed by percussion/impact ('hitting') verbs in English and Warlpiri (Pama-Nyungan, Central Australia). The opening chapters develop a novel theoretical orientation for the study of polysemy via a close examination of two theoretical traditions under the broader cognitivist umbrella: Langackerian and Lakovian Cognitive Semantics and Wierzbickian Natural Semantic Metalanguage. Arguments are offered which problematize attempts in these traditions to ground the analysis of meaning either in cognitive or neurological reality, or in the existence of universal synonymy relations within the lexicon. Instead, an interpretative rather than a scientific construal of linguistic theorizing is sketched, in the context of a close examination of certain key issues in the contemporary study of polysemy such as sense individuation, the role of reference in linguistic categorization, and the demarcation between metaphor and metonymy. The later chapters present a detailed typology of the polysemous senses of English and Warlpiri percussion/impact (or P/I) verbs based on a diachronically deep corpus of dictionary citations from Middle to contemporary English, and on a large corpus of Warlpiri citations. Limited to the operations of metaphor and of three categories of metonymy, this typology posits just four types of basic relation between extended and core meanings. As a result, the phenomenon of polysemy and semantic extension emerges as amenable to strikingly concise description.
Carrier Form: 1 online resource (503pages)
ISBN: 9783110197556
Index Number: P325
CLC: H030
Contents: Frontmatter --
Table of contents --
Chapter 1 Cognition and linguistic science --
Chapter 2 Meaning, definition and --
paraphrase --
Chapter 3 Evidence for polysemy --
Chapter 4 A four-category theory of --
polysemy --
Chapter 5 Applications I: English --
Chapter 6 Applications II: Warlpiri --
Chapter 7 Conclusion: description and explanation --
in semantics --
Backmatter