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Studies in functional and structural linguistics ;.
Lexicalization patterns in color naming: a cross-linguistic perspective. — v. 78. / edited by Ida Raffaelli, Daniela Katunar, Barbara Kerovec. — 1 online resource (vi, 429 pages). — (Studies in functional and structural linguistics (SFSL)). — <URL:http://elib.fa.ru/ebsco/2294306.pdf>.

Record create date: 7/15/2019

Subject: Language and color.; Comparative linguistics.; Langage et couleur.; Livres numériques.; e-books.; Electronic books.; Comparative linguistics.; Language and color.

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Table of Contents

  • Lexicalization patterns in color naming
  • Editorial page
  • Title page
  • Copyright page
  • Table of contents
  • Introduction
    • 1. Colors in the universalist and relativist framework
    • 2. Lexicalization patterns in the relativist approach to color terms
    • 3. Aims and motivation
    • 4. Language diversity
    • 5. Main topic sections of the volume
      • 5.1 Lexicalization patterns in and over time
      • 5.2 Color terms in a genealogical and typological perspective
      • 5.3 Languages in culture and languages in contact
    • Acknowledgements
    • References
  • Part I. Lexicalization patterns in and over time
  • Rethinking the category of “basic color term”: Evidence from Hungarian lexicalization patterns
    • 1. Introduction
      • 1.1 Anomalies
      • 1.2 The foregrounding of psychological salience and the backgrounding of linguistic aspects in basic color term research
      • 1.3 Attempts to redefine “basicness”
    • 2. Aims of the research
      • 2.1 Hypotheses
    • 3. Methodology
    • 4. The emergence of Hungarian basic color terms
    • 5. Results of the corpus-based analysis
    • 6. Conclusions
    • References
  • Lexicalization patterns in Slovak color naming
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. The cultural and historical aspects of color naming
      • 2.1 Influence of culture on color spectrum differentiation
      • 2.2 Developmental particularities of the Slovak color naming system
    • 3. Lexicalization patterns in color naming
      • 3.1 Basic meanings expressed by derivation and composition
      • 3.2 Productivity of lexicalization patterns and meaning categories
      • 3.3 The semantic pattern ‘N-like’ in color naming
    • 4. Conclusion
    • References
      • Internet sources
  • Compound color terms in Italian
    • 1. Introduction and brief survey of the literature
    • 2. Color terms formed by means of morphological devices
      • 2.1 Derivation
      • 2.2 Conversion
      • 2.3 Compounding
    • 3. Conclusion
    • References
  • “Brightness” in color linguistics: New light from Danish visual semantics
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Visual semantics
    • 3. Methods
    • 4. Linguaculture and lexicogrammar
      • 4.1 The meaning of lyserød
      • 4.2 The meaning of lysegrøn
      • 4.3 The meaning of lyseblå
      • 4.4 Summary
    • 5. Back to “brightness”
    • 6. Concluding remarks
    • Acknowledgment
    • References
    • Appendix. Explications in Danish NSM
  • Lexicalization patterns in color naming in Korean
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Preliminaries: Sound symbolism
      • 2.1 Vowel polarity
      • 2.2 Consonant tensing and aspiration
      • 2.3 Reduplication: Iconicity of multiplicity
    • 3. Lexicalization patterns
      • 3.1 Nominal category
      • 3.2 Adjectival/adverbial categories
      • 3.3 Verbal category
    • 4. Semantics-morphology interface
      • 4.1 Iconicity
      • 4.2 Synesthesia of multiple senses
      • 4.3 Color and evaluation (attitude)
      • 4.4 Productivity and novel coinage
    • 5. Summary and conclusion
    • Acknowledgment
    • References
    • Appendix. 127 RED-words in Korean (not exhaustive)
  • Lexicalization patterns in color naming in Gbaya, a Ubanguian language of CAR
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Lexical and grammatical devices for color naming
      • 2.1 Nouns
      • 2.2 Verbs
      • 2.3 Adjectives
    • 3. When and how do the Gbaya use color terms in a daily task?
      • 3.1 Colors in compound nouns
      • 3.2 Colors in actual use
    • 4. Conclusion
    • References
    • Appendix
  • Part II. Color terms in a genealogical and typological perspective
  • Innovations in Semitic color term systems
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Proto-Semitic basic color terms and subsequent developments of Semitic BCT systems
    • 3. Sources for innovative CTs
    • 4. Derivations of color terms from names of natural objects
      • 4.1 ‘Wax’ > ‘yellow’
      • 4.2 Various types of vegetation (grass, vegetable, leaf) as sources for ‘green’
      • 4.3 ‘Sky’ > ‘blue’
    • 5. Derivation of color terms from the names of dyes
      • 5.1 Names of dyes as sources for ‘yellow’
      • 5.2 Names of dyes and dyed artifacts as sources for ‘blue’
    • 6. Conclusions
    • Acknowledgment
    • Abbreviations
    • References
  • Lexicalization patterns in color naming: The case of Modern Hindī
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. The “metonymy”-type of Hindī colors lexicalization patterns
    • 3. The “approximation”-type of Hindī color lexicalization patterns
      • 3.1 The use of the comparative suffix -sā
      • 3.2 Reduplication in south Asian languages: The case of modern Hindī
    • 4. Conclusion
    • Acknowledgement
    • Abbreviations
    • References
  • Complex color denomination in French and Occitan
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Methodology
    • 3. Color naming strategies in French and Occitan
      • 3.1 Simple terms: Primary terms and analogy
      • 3.2 Derived terms
      • 3.3 Compounds
      • 3.4 Modifying expressions
      • 3.5 Complex descriptions
    • 4. Naming strategies and variation among participants
    • 5. Discussion and concluding remarks
    • Acknowledgment
    • Abbreviations
    • References
  • Color terms in Basque: Lexicalization and categorization
    • 1. The Basque color system
      • 1.1 Ancient and not so ancient color labels
      • 1.2 Lexico-morphological devices for color
      • 1.3 Basque lexicalization patterns for color
    • 2. The use of Basque lexicalization patterns for color
      • 2.1 Methodology
      • 2.2 Analysis
    • 3. Conclusions
    • Acknowledgements
    • References
    • Appendix 1. Basque speakers’ labels and usage for the description of color hue and achromatism
  • Lexicalization patterns in color naming in Croatian, Czech, and Polish
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Theoretical background
      • 2.1 Universalist vs relativist approach to the study of colors
      • 2.2 Linguistic conventionalization
      • 2.3 Lexicalization patterns in color naming
    • 3. Method and data
    • 4. Types of lexicalization patterns used in color naming in Croatian, Czech, and Polish
      • 4.1 Suffixation as a lexicalization pattern in the three languages
      • 4.2 Compounding as a lexicalization pattern [Adj [o] Adj] in the three languages
      • 4.3 The lexicalization patterns [Adv + Adj] and [Adj + Adj]
      • 4.4 Nouns in color terms
    • 5. Some concluding remarks
    • References
  • Color naming in Africa
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Data and methodology
    • 3. Monochromatic vs polychromatic color terms
      • 3.1 Monochromatic color terms
      • 3.2 Polychromatic color terms
    • 4. Semantic sources of color terms
      • 4.1 Vegetable kingdom
      • 4.2 Animals
      • 4.3 Mineral kingdom
      • 4.4 Body-related terms
      • 4.5 Food
      • 4.6 Atmospheric elements
      • 4.7 Other sources
    • 5. Borrowings
      • 5.1 Blue
      • 5.2 Green
      • 5.3 Yellow
      • 5.4 Other colors
    • 6. Colexification of color terms
      • 6.1 Colexifications with ‘ripe’, ‘raw’, wet
      • 6.2 Colexifications with ‘pure, clean’ and ‘dirty’
      • 6.3 Colexifications with terms for personality traits
      • 6.4 Colexifications with terms for emotions and affects
      • 6.5 Colexifications with terms for evaluative judgments
      • 6.6 Colexifications with terms for truth value judgments
      • 6.7 Colexifications with terms pertaining to sensory modalities
      • 6.8 Colexifications with supernatural, dangerous or remarkable beings
    • 7. Patterns of lexicalization
      • 7.1 Noun class alternation
      • 7.2 Reduplication
      • 7.3 Compounding and genitive phrases
      • 7.4 Similative adpositions
      • 7.5 Affixation
      • 7.6 Diminutives
    • 8. Ideophones
    • 9. Conclusion
    • References
    • Appendix. Language list and source references
  • Part III. Languages in culture and languages in contact
  • Universals and variability of color naming in Icelandic, Icelandic Sign Language, and North American Icelandic
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Background
    • 3. Method
      • 3.1 Participants
      • 3.2 Data elicitation
      • 3.3 Coding
    • 4. Results
      • 4.1 Statistical analysis
      • 4.2 Main terms and dominant terms
      • 4.3 Morphology and semantics of full responses
    • 5. Conclusion
    • Acknowledgment
    • References
  • Symbolic and cultural meaning of colors in phraseology: A cross-linguistic and cross-cultural study of Russian and German phraseological units
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Basic color terms in Russian and German phraseology
      • 2.1 Black
      • 2.2 White
      • 2.3 Red
      • 2.4 Green
      • 2.5 Blue
      • 2.6 Yellow
      • 2.7 Grey
      • 2.8 Pink
      • 2.9 Purple
      • 2.10 Orange
      • 2.11 Brown
    • 3. Lexicalization patterns of color terms based on Russian and German phraseology
    • 4. Conclusion
    • References
  • From object to color and back: Seeing the world in color in Croatian, Turkish, and Arabic
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Lexicalization patterns of color term formation in Croatian, Turkish, and Arabic
      • 2.1 object for color lexicalization patterns
      • 2.2 Compounding and hue overlap
      • 2.3 Brightness and intensity modification
    • 3. From object to color and back
      • 3.1 Data collection and analysis
      • 3.2 Domains lexicalized by color terms
    • 4. Concluding remarks and future work
    • References
    • Dictionaries
    • Online dictionaries and corpora
  • Ossetic color terms system
    • 1. Previous studies
    • 2. Methodology
    • 3. Basic color terms
    • 4. Ossetic stage of color terms development and the origin of basic color terms
    • 5. Some semantic and morphological peculiarities of basic colors
    • 6. Derivational and compound color terms
      • 6.1 ‑χwǝž pattern
      • 6.2 Compounds
    • 7. Synonyms
      • 7.1 Distribution of kɜrdɜgχwǝž and c?ɜχ
      • 7.2 Distribution of ɜrvχwǝž, kɜrdɜgχwǝž and c?ɜχ
    • 8. Color modifiers
      • 8.1 Morphological markers
      • 8.2 Lexical modifiers
    • 9. Connotations of the basic colors
    • 10. Special color terms in Ossetic
    • 11. Conclusions
    • Abbreviations
    • References
  • Index

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