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Conceptual metonymy: methodological, theoretical, and descriptive issues / edited by Olga Blanco Carrión, Antonio Barcelona, Rossella Pannain. — 1 online resource. — (Human cognitive processing(HCP). — <URL:http://elib.fa.ru/ebsco/1795207.pdf>.

Дата создания записи: 03.01.2018

Тематика: Metonyms — Case studies. — Psychological aspects; Metonyms — Case studies.; Cognitive grammar — Case studies.; Metaphor — Case studies.; LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / General

Коллекции: EBSCO

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Оглавление

  • Conceptual Metonymy
  • Editorial page
  • Title page
  • LCC data
  • Dedication page
  • Table of contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction: The complex task of studying metonymy
    • 1. On the main purpose and characteristics of this book
    • 2. Methodological and descriptive issues in the creation of a metonymy database
    • 3. Theoretical problems in the study of metonymy
    • 4. Case studies
    • 5. Recapitulation
      • 5.1 New descriptive methods and criteria
      • 5.2 Theoretical issues
      • 5.3 New concepts and trends in metonymy research
      • 5.4 New empirical data on metonymy
    • Acknowledgments
    • References
  • Part 1. General issues in the description of metonymy: Issues in the design and implementation of a metonymy database
  • Chapter 1. General description of the metonymy database in the Córdoba project, with particular attention to the issues of hierarchy, prototypicality, and taxonomic domains
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Discussion of Fields 1, 2, and 10: Category labels and hierarchies
      • 2.1 Field 1
      • 2.2 Field 2
      • 2.3 Field 10
    • 3. Discussion of Field 3: Metonymic prototypicality
    • 4. Discussion of Field 4: Taxonomic domains
    • 5. A simple example of the application of the database
    • 6. Summary and conclusions
    • Acknowledgments
    • References
  • Chapter 2. Conventionality and linguistic domain(s) involved in the characterization of metonymies (for the creation of a detailed typology of metonymy)
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Discussion of Field 5: Conventionality
    • 3. Discussion of Field 7: Linguistic domains/levels at which the metonymy is attested
      • 3.1 Grammatical rank
      • 3.2 Meaning
      • 3.3 Constructional form
      • 3.4 Grammatical process involved
      • 3.5 Main function
    • 4. Summary and conclusions
    • Acknowledgments
    • References
      • Dictionaries
  • Chapter 3. Analysis of metonymic triggers, metonymic chaining and patterns of interaction with metaphor and with other metonymies as part of the metonymy database in the Córdoba project
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Field 8. Metonymic trigger(s): (Factors) leading to the operation of the metonymy under analysis
    • 3. Field 9. Metonymic chaining
    • 4. Field 11. Patterns of interaction with metaphor and with other metonymies
    • 5. Summary and conclusions
    • Acknowledgments
    • References
  • Part ii. Discussion of some general properties of metonymy
  • Chapter 4. Some contrast effects in metonymy
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Degrees of source/target contrast in metonymy
    • 3. Contrast and evaluation
      • 3.1 (De-)emphasis and de-personalization
      • 3.2 De-roling
      • 3.3 Irony through de-roling and other means
    • 4. Transferred epithets
      • 4.1 The phenomenon and its metonymic aspect
      • 4.2 Metaphorical aspects of transferred epithets
    • 5. Conclusions
    • Acknowledgments
    • References
  • Chapter 5. What kind of reasoning mode is metonymy?
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Properties of metonymy
      • 2.1 The basic metonymic relation
      • 2.2 Metonymy as an associative and indexical relation
      • 2.3 Situation, context and conceptual frame components
      • 2.4 Experiential and sociocultural grounding of metonymy
      • 2.5 Contiguity
      • 2.6 Contingency
      • 2.7 Target orientation of metonymy
      • 2.8 Metonymy as a source-in-target operation
      • 2.9 Pragmatic effects
      • 2.10 Pragmatic types of metonymy
    • 3. Three modes of reasoning
      • 3.1 Deduction
      • 3.2 Induction
      • 3.3 Abduction
      • 3.4 Interim conclusion
    • 4. Metonymy as an abductive reasoning strategy
    • 5. Metonymy and implicature
      • 5.1 Cancelability/defeasibility
      • 5.2 Reinforceability
    • 6. Conclusions
    • References
  • Chapter 6. Molly married money: Reflections on conceptual metonymy
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Metonymic source and target
    • 3. Association
      • 3.1 Co-activation
      • 3.2 Inference
      • 3.3 Strength of association
    • 4. Metonymic relation
      • 4.1 Contiguity
      • 4.2 Indexicality
    • 5. Metonymic shift
    • 6. Conceptual integration
    • 7. Conclusions
    • References
  • Part 3. Ubiquity of metonymy in languages
  • Chapter 7. How metonymy motivates constructions: The case of monoclausal if-only P constructions in English
    • 1. Preliminaries: Conceptual and constructional metonymy in grammar
    • 2. Dancygier and Sweetser’s account of the if-only construction
      • 2.1 if-only P, Q construction
      • 2.2 Monoclausal if-only P construction
    • 3. Objections to Dancygier and Sweetser’s analysis
      • 3.1 Objection 1: There is no single biclausal if-only P, Q construction
      • 3.2 Objection 2: There is no single monoclausal if-only P, Q construction
      • 3.3 Objection 3: The condition is minimally sufficient
      • 3.4 Objection 4: I wish performatives are not synonymous with if-only P
      • 3.5 Objection 5: Not just a wish but a range of speech acts
    • 4. Discussion and conclusions
    • References
  • Chapter 8. The role of metonymy in the constructionist approach to the conceptualization of emotions
    • 1. Introduction
      • 1.1 Epistemological and ontological problems of the conceptualization of emotions
      • 1.2 Embodied perspective on the communication of emotions
      • 1.3 Linguistic constructions of emotions
    • 2. Emergent constructionist model of the conceptualization of fear in Croatian
      • 2.1 Sensory-motor metonymic constructions
      • 2.2 Ontological constructions
      • 2.3 Spatial constructions
      • 2.4 Thematic constructions
      • 2.5 Agentive constructions
    • 3. Conclusion
    • References
  • Chapter 9. The mouth of the speaker: Italian metonymies of Linguistic Action
    • 1. Introduction
      • 1.1 Linguistic scope, sources and methodology
    • 2. Morphology and semantics of individual lexical items
      • 2.1 malalingua / mala lingua
      • 2.2 lingua lunga / lingualunga
      • 2.3 Evaluative derivates linguaccia and boccaccia
    • 3. Metonymy in the speech organs sub-domain of linguistic action
    • 4. Conceptual processes in the representation of speakers/verbal behaviors in Italian
      • 4.1 malalingua / mala lingua
      • 4.2 lingua lunga/lingualunga
      • 4.3 linguaccia and boccaccia
    • 5. Conclusions
    • Acknowledgments
    • References
      • Corpora
      • On-line dictionaries
  • Chapter 10. ‘Are smartphone face and Googleheads a real or a fake phenomenon?’: The current role of metonymy in semantic exocentricity
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Exocentricity in English?
    • 3. The scope of this work: Semantic exocentricity
    • 4. Methodology and discussion
      • 4.1 Possessive compounds
      • 4.2 Ailment descriptors
      • 4.3 Other inanimate formations
    • 5. Concluding remarks
    • Acknowledgements
    • References
    • Appendix
  • Chapter 11. Metonymy and the dynamics of conceptual operations in Spanish Sign Language
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. The approach to Cognitive Metonymy and iconicity
    • 3. Metonymic conceptualization of articulators
    • 4. Analysis of three LSE constructions
      • 4.1 Metonymies at the lexical level of iconic construal
      • 4.2 Metonymies at the phrasal level
      • 4.3 Metonymy motivating the constructional form at phrase level
    • 5. Conclusion
    • Acknowledgments
    • References
    • Dictionaries
    • YouTube pages
  • Metonymy index
  • Name index
  • Subject index

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