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Figurative thought and language ;.
Figurative meaning construction in thought and language. — v. 9. / edited by Annalisa Baicchi. — 1 online resource (vi, 311 pages) : illustrations. — (Figurative thought and language). — Papers presented at the 2nd International Symposium on Figurative Thought and Language, November, 2015 at the University of Pavia, Italy. — <URL:http://elib.fa.ru/ebsco/2528645.pdf>.

Record create date: 4/23/2020

Subject: Cognitive grammar — Congresses.; Metaphor — Congresses.; Figures of speech Congresses.; Cognitive grammar.; Metaphor.

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"This volume brings together twelve usage-based studies conducted by leading researchers in language and cognition that explore core issues of figurativeness from the Cognitive Linguistics perspective. The individual chapters reveal the central function of figurativeness in thought and its impact on language. Cognition relies on knowledge-structuring tools in the construction of meaning both mentally and linguistically. Collectively, the chapters delve into an array of topics that are crucial to future research in figurative meaning construction, especially on questions of identification and structure of figures, the figurative motivation of constructions, the impact of figurativeness on pragmatic and multimodal communication, and the correlation between figures and cognitive models"--.

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Table of Contents

  • Figurative Meaning Construction in Thought and Language
  • Editorial page
  • Title page
  • Copyright page
  • Table of contents
  • Foreword and acknowledgements
  • Figurativeness all the way down: By way of introduction
    • Part I. Figurativeness and theory: Addition, identification and structure
    • Part II. Figurativeness and constructions
    • Part III. Figurativeness, pragmaticity and multimodality
    • Part IV. Typology of figures and cognitive models
    • References
  • Part I. Figurativeness and theory: Addition, identification and structure
  • Metaphor thoughtfully
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Some cautionary remarks
    • 3. The potential usefulness or otherwise of metaphorical thoughts
    • 4. The addition of metaphor in understanding
    • 5. Discourse coherence through metaphorization
    • 6. The Anti-Analogy-Extension Thesis
    • 7. A type of holism
    • 8. Further discussion
      • 8.1 Handling metaphor with fictions
      • 8.2 Holism and indirectness of representation again
      • 8.3 The source of action
      • 8.4 Back to bidirectionality
    • 9. Concluding remarks
    • Acknowledgements
    • References
    • Funding information
  • Separating (non-)figurative weeds from wheat
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Some approaches to the recognition, identification and extraction of figurative expressions
    • 3. Turning our back to figurative wheat and attending to non-figurative weeds first: Why and how?
    • 4. A brief note on metonymies
    • 5. Concluding remarks and outlook
    • References
    • Funding information
  • A multi-level view of metaphor and some of its advantages
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. What are the appropriate conceptual structures in CMT?: Image schemas, domains, frames, or mental spaces?
    • 3. Should conceptual metaphors be formulated at a schematic or specific level?
    • 4. Which source domain items are mapped onto the target?
    • 5. Do the mappings always go from source to target?
    • 6. Are there any “isolated” metaphors?
    • 7. Summary and discussion
    • 8. Conclusions
    • Acknowledgements
    • References
  • Part II. Figurativeness and constructions
  • Intensification via figurative language
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Interaction between figures in a construction
    • 3. Constructions
    • 4. Conceptual incongruity and intensification
    • 5. Concluding remarks
    • Acknowledgements
    • References
  • Falling to one’s death in multiple landscapes: From blending to typology
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Multiple landscapes
    • 3. To one’s death is not a result phrase, or is it?
      • 3.1 Defining result(ative) phrases
      • 3.2 The role of simultaneity
    • 4. To one’s death as a metonymy
      • 4.1 Access to the target
      • 4.2 Metaphoric motion
      • 4.3 Revealing the target
      • 4.4 Verb variation
      • 4.5 Other prepositional phrases
      • 4.6 Interim conclusion
    • 5. Ecological motivation
    • 6. Conclusions
    • Acknowledgements
    • References
  • Metaphorical adjective-noun phrases in German journalese
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Former research on metaphorical adjective-noun phrases
    • 3. A cognitive linguistics framework for the exploration of ANPs
    • 4. A semantic and conceptual study of metaphorical ANPs
      • 4.1 Adjective [literal] + noun [metaphorical]
      • 4.2 Adjective [metaphorical] + noun [literal]
      • 4.3 Adjective + noun [metaphorical]
      • 4.4 Contextual information with pictures
    • 5. The nature of domain adjectives
    • 6. Conclusions
    • Acknowledgements
    • References
  • Metonymy meets coercion: The case of the intensification of nouns in attributive and predicative constructions in Spanish
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. An overview of Cognitive Construction Grammar
    • 3. On the role of subjectivity, metonymy and parameterization
    • 4. The coercion of nouns in attributive and predicative contexts in Spanish
    • 5. The gradable construction with muy (‘very’) as an incipient case of constructionalization
    • 6. A fine-grained analysis of the “X es muy N(=A)” construction in present-day Spanish
      • 6.1 Celebrity names
      • 6.2 Animals
      • 6.3 Place names
      • 6.4 Brand names
      • 6.5 Company names
      • 6.6 Internet
      • 6.7 Characters (whether real or fictional)
      • 6.8 Time
      • 6.9 TV shows
      • 6.10 Events
      • 6.11 Music (style/lyrics)
      • 6.12 Movies
      • 6.13 Institutions
      • 6.14 Specific institutions
      • 6.15 Food
      • 6.16 Sports
      • 6.17 Clothes
      • 6.18 Body parts
    • 7. Closing remarks and outlook
    • Acknowledgements
    • References
    • Funding information
  • Part III. Figurativeness, pragmaticity and multimodality
  • Sources of pragmatic effects in irony and hyperbole
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. The relevance of hyperbole: The case of accusation denials
    • 3. Experiment 1
      • 3.1 Participants
      • 3.2 Materials
      • 3.3 Design and procedure
      • 3.4 Results and discussion
    • 4. Experiment 2
      • 4.1 Participants
      • 4.2 Materials
      • 4.3 Design and procedure
      • 4.4 Results and discussion
    • 5. Experiment 3
      • 5.1 Participants
      • 5.2 Materials
      • 5.3 Design and procedure
      • 5.4 Results
    • 6. General discussion
      • 6.1 Non-ironic denials
      • 6.2 Ironic denials
      • 6.3 Relevance and pragmatic effects
    • Acknowledgements
    • References
  • Metaphorical interplay of words and gestures in the Catholic liturgy
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Monomodal and multimodal conceptual metaphors
    • 3. Linguistic studies on the Catholic liturgy
    • 4. Gestures in the Catholic liturgy
    • 5. The god is up metaphor in the Catholic liturgy
    • 6. Personifications of god in the Catholic liturgy
    • 7. Metaphors of sin in the Catholic liturgy
    • 8. Metaphors of the christian life in the Catholic liturgy
    • 9. Conclusions
    • References
  • Part IV. Typology of figures and cognitive models
  • Figures of speech revisited: Introducing syntonymy and syntaphor
    • 1. Between synecdoche and metonymy – syntonymy
    • 2. From analogy to syntaphor and metaphor
      • 2.1 Syntaphor vs. schematization and specialization
    • 3. Catachresis and conceptual niches vs. syntaphor and other figures of speech
    • 4. Conclusions
    • References
  • Cutting and breaking metaphors of the self and the Motivation and Sedimentation Model
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. What: Cutting and breaking metaphors of the self
      • 2.1 Separation: Reversible and irreversible, actual and non-actual
      • 2.2 Irreversible, non-actual separation of the self
    • 3. How: Identifying C&B metaphors of the self in English Corpora
      • 3.1 Data and methodology
      • 3.2 Identifying irreversible non-actual separation (INAS) expressions
      • 3.3 Different dimensions of the self
    • 4. How: Probing the data with quantitative tools
      • 4.1 Representativeness
      • 4.2 Correlations between INAS expression types and self-dimension types
    • 5. What, Why and How: MSM and cutting and breaking metaphors of the self
    • 6. Conclusions
    • Acknowledgements
    • References
    • Appendix A
    • Funding information
  • The metonymic exploitation of descriptive, attitudinal, and regulatory scenarios in meaning making
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. The Lexical Constructional Model (LCM)
    • 3. Cognitive models
    • 4. Cognitive operations: Metonymy and metonymic chains
      • 4.1 Metonymy: Expansion and reduction mechanisms
      • 4.2 Metonymic chains
    • 5. Profile-base relations
    • 6. Scenarios, metonymic activity and pragmatic inference
      • 6.1 Descriptive scenarios
      • 6.2 Attitudinal scenarios
      • 6.3 Regulatory scenarios
    • 7. Concluding remarks
    • References
    • Funding information
  • Index

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