• FinUniversity Electronic Library

Details

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>.

Allowed Actions

Action 'Read' will be available if you login or access site from another network

Action 'Download' will be available if you login or access site from another network

Group Anonymous
Network Internet
Network User group Action
Finuniversity Local Network All
Read Print Download
Internet Readers
Read Print
Internet Anonymous
  • 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

Access count: 0 
Last 30 days: 0

Detailed usage statistics