Cognitive Linguistics

Höfundur Vyvyan Evans

Útgefandi Edinburgh University Press

Snið Page Fidelity

Print ISBN 9781474405225

Útgáfa 2

Útgáfuár 2019

5.090 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Contents
  • Figures
  • Tables
  • Preface
  • Abbreviations
  • Part I: The cognitive linguistics enterprise
  • 1 What do cognitive linguists study?
  • 1 What is language for?
  • 1.1 The symbolic function of language
  • 1.2 The interactive function of language
  • 2 The systematic structure of language
  • 2.1 Evidence for a system
  • 2.2 The systematic structure of thought
  • 3 What do cognitive linguists do?
  • 3.1 What?
  • 3.2 Why?
  • 3.3 How?
  • 3.4 Speaker intuitions
  • 3.5 Converging evidence
  • 4 What it means to know a language (from the perspective of cognitive linguistics)
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • 2 Key commitments and research methods
  • 1 Two key commitments
  • 2 The Generalisation Commitment
  • 2.1 Categorisation
  • 2.1.1 Categorisation in morphology: the diminutive in Italian
  • 2.1.2 Categorisation in syntax: ‘parts of speech’
  • 2.1.3 Categorisation in phonology: distinctive features
  • 2.2 Polysemy
  • 2.2.1 Polysemy in the lexicon: over
  • 2.2.2 Polysemy in morphology: agentive -er suffix
  • 2.2.3 Polysemy in syntax: ditransitive construction
  • 2.3 Metaphor
  • 2.3.1 Metaphor in the lexicon: over (again)
  • 2.3.2 Metaphor in syntax: the ditransitive (again)
  • 3 The Cognitive Commitment
  • 3.1 Attention: profiling in language
  • 3.2 Categorisation: fuzzy categories
  • 3.3 Metaphor
  • 4 Research methods
  • 4.1 Phenomena studied by cognitive linguistics
  • 4.2 Research methods in cognitive linguistics
  • 4.2.1 Introspective method
  • 4.2.2 Audio-visual method
  • 4.2.3 Corpus method
  • 4.2.4 Behavioural method
  • 4.2.5 Neuroscientific method
  • 5 The field of cognitive linguistics
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • 3 Foundations of experience I: space
  • 1 Spatial perception
  • 1.1 Three stages of perception
  • 1.2 Percepts versus concepts
  • 1.3 Types of perceptual experience
  • 1.4 How do percepts arise?
  • 1.5 Bottom-up theories
  • 1.5.1 Texture perception
  • 1.5.2 Object perception
  • 1.6 Top-down theories: form perception
  • 1.6.1 Figure–ground organisation
  • 1.6.2 Gestalt grouping principles
  • 2 Linguistic reflexes of perceptual experience
  • 2.1 ‘What’ versus ‘where’ systems in perception and language
  • 2.2 Figure–ground segregation in perception and language
  • 3 Spatial representation in language
  • 3.1 The nature of spatial schemas
  • 3.1.1 Spatio-geometric components
  • 3.1.2 Properties of components
  • 3.1.3 Relations between components
  • 3.2 The functional nature of spatial schemas
  • 3.3 Spatial frames of reference
  • 3.3.1 Case study: Talmy’s taxonomy of s-FoRs
  • 4 Cross-linguistic variation in the representation of space
  • 4.1 Categorising spatial scenes in English and Korean
  • 4.2 S-FoRs in Guugu Yimithirr
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • 4 Foundations of experience II: time
  • 1 Temporal perception
  • 1.1 The subjective reality of time
  • 1.1.1 Experience of events
  • 1.1.2 Vital functioning
  • 1.1.3 Individual factors
  • 1.2 Facets of temporal experience
  • 1.2.1 Parameters for comparing space and time
  • 1.2.2 A taxonomy of temporal experience types
  • 2 Linguistic representations for time
  • 2.1 The spatialisation of time
  • 2.1.1 Time is space
  • 2.1.2 Experimental evidence
  • 2.1.3 Further developments
  • 2.2 Lexical concepts for time
  • 2.2.1 Time
  • 2.2.2 Temporal aspects of an event: Christmas
  • 2.3 Temporal frames of reference
  • 2.3.1 The spatial basis of t-FoRs
  • 2.3.2 The temporal basis of t-FoRs
  • 3 Cross-linguistic patterns in the conceptualisation of time
  • 3.1 The past and future in Aymara
  • 3.2 Earlier and later in Mandarin
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • 5 Language in use I: knowledge of language
  • 1 Language in use
  • 1.1 A usage event
  • 1.2 The relationship between usage and linguistic structure
  • 1.3 Comprehension and production
  • 1.4 Context
  • 1.5 Frequency
  • 2 Cognitive Grammar
  • 2.1 Abstraction, schematisation and language use
  • 2.2 Schemas and their instantiations
  • 2.3 Partial sanction
  • 2.4 The non-reductive nature of schemas
  • 2.5 Frequency in schema formation
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • 6 Language in use II: language change,and acquisition
  • 1 A usage-based approach to language change
  • 1.1 Historical linguistics and language change
  • 1.2 The utterance selection theory of language change
  • 1.3 The generalised theory of selection and the theory of utterance selection
  • 1.4 Causal mechanisms for language change
  • 1.4.1 Normal replication
  • 1.4.2 Intentional altered replication
  • 1.4.3 Non-intentional altered replication
  • 1.4.4 Selection
  • 1.5 Causal mechanisms of language stability and change
  • 2 The usage-based approach to language acquisition
  • 2.1 Empirical findings in language acquisition
  • 2.2 The cognitive view: sociocognitive mechanisms in language acquisition
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • 7 Key topics in language science: formal versus cognitive linguistics
  • 1 Language origins and time depth
  • 1.1 The received view of human evolution
  • 1.2 How old is language?
  • 1.3 What motivated the rise of language?
  • 1.4 Stages in language evolution
  • 2 Language universals
  • 2.1 The Universal Grammar approach
  • 2.1.1 The falsifiability problem
  • 2.1.2 The methodological problem
  • 2.1.3 The abstractness problem
  • 2.2 The cognitive linguistics approach
  • 2.2.1 Human interactional intelligence
  • 2.2.2 Universal scenes of experience
  • 3 Language acquisition
  • 3.1 The rise of the nativist approach to L1 acquisition
  • 3.2 The cognitive linguistics critique
  • 3.2.1 Problem of absence of discontinuous learning jumps
  • 3.2.2 Problem of absence of evidence not implying evidence of absence
  • 3.2.3 Problem of findings from neurobiology
  • 4 Modularity of mind
  • 4.1 Double dissociations
  • 4.2 Localisation of language
  • 4.3 The cognitive linguistics critique
  • 5 Semantic universals
  • 5.1 The semantic decomposition approach
  • 5.2 The cognitive linguistics critique
  • 6 Language and thought
  • 6.1 Strong versus weak versions of linguistic relativity
  • 6.2 The cognitive linguistics perspective
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • Part II: Conceptual structure
  • 8 What is a cognitive linguistics approach to conceptual structure?
  • 1 Guiding principles
  • 1.1 Conceptual structure is embodied
  • 1.2 Semantic structure reflects conceptual structure
  • 2 Comparing and contrasting approaches to conceptualstructure
  • 2.1 Two views of concepts and the mind
  • 2.1.1 Disembodied cognition
  • 2.1.2 Embodied cognition
  • 2.1.3 Embodied versus disembodied cognition perspectives
  • 2.2 The symbol grounding problem
  • 2.3 Evidence for the embodied cognition perspective
  • 2.4 Experiential realism
  • 3 Embodiment effects in semantic structure
  • 3.1 Types of embodiment effects
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • 9 Image schemas and the origin of concepts
  • 1 The origin of concepts
  • 1.1 Perceptual meaning analysis
  • 1.2 The nature of a child’s first concepts
  • 1.3 The embodied basis of conceptual structure
  • 2 Image schema theory
  • 2.1 What is an image schema?
  • 2.2 An example
  • 3 Properties of image schemas
  • 3.1 Image schemas are pre-conceptual in origin
  • 3.2 An image schema can give rise to more specific concepts
  • 3.3 Image schemas derive from interaction with and observationof the world
  • 3.4 Image schemas are inherently meaningful
  • 3.5 Image schemas are analogue representations
  • 3.6 Image schemas can be internally complex
  • 3.7 Image schemas are not the same as mental images
  • 3.8 Image schemas are multimodal
  • 3.9 Image schemas are subject to transformations
  • 3.10 Image schemas can occur in clusters
  • 3.11 Image schemas underlie linguistic meaning
  • 3.12 Image schemas give rise to abstract thought
  • 3.13 A partial list of image schemas
  • 4 Refining image schema theory
  • 4.1 Spatial primitives
  • 4.2 Image schemas
  • 4.3 Schematic integrations
  • 5 Mimetic schemas
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • 10 Cognitive Semantics
  • 1 Semantic structure
  • 2 The configuration of space and time
  • 2.1 time versus space
  • 2.2 Conceptual alternativity
  • 3 Schematic systems
  • 3.1 The Configurational Structure system
  • 3.1.1 Overview
  • 3.1.2 Plexity
  • 3.1.3 Boundedness
  • 3.1.4 Dividedness
  • 3.1.5 Disposition of quantity
  • 3.1.6 Degree of extension
  • 3.1.7 Patterns of distribution
  • 3.1.8 Axiality
  • 3.2 The Attentional System
  • 3.2.1 Overview
  • 3.2.2 Focus of attention pattern
  • 3.2.3 Windowing pattern
  • 3.2.4 Level of attention pattern
  • 3.3 The Perspectival System
  • 3.3.1 Overview
  • 3.3.2 Perspectival location
  • 3.3.3 Perspectival distance
  • 3.3.4 Perspectival mode
  • 3.3.5 Perspectival direction
  • 3.4 The Force-Dynamics System
  • 3.4.1 Overview
  • 3.4.2 Types of force
  • 3.4.3 Antagonist versus agonist
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • 11 Categorisation and idealised cognitive models
  • 1 A new approach to categorisation and the development of cognitive linguistics
  • 2 The classical theory
  • 2.1 The definitional problem
  • 2.2 The problem of conceptual fuzziness
  • 2.3 The problem of prototypicality
  • 2.4 Further problems
  • 3 Prototype theory
  • 3.1 Principles of categorisation
  • 3.1.1 Principle of cognitive economy
  • 3.1.2 Principle of perceived world structure
  • 3.2 The categorisation system
  • 3.3 The vertical dimension
  • 3.3.1 Attributes
  • 3.3.2 Motor movements
  • 3.3.3 Similarity of shapes
  • 3.3.4 Identification based on averaged shapes
  • 3.3.5 Cognitive economy versus level of detail
  • 3.3.6 Perceptual salience
  • 3.3.7 Language acquisition
  • 3.3.8 Basic-level terms in language
  • 3.3.9 Are basic-level categories universal?
  • 3.4 The horizontal dimension
  • 3.4.1 Goodness-of-example ratings
  • 3.4.2 Family resemblance
  • 3.5 Problems with prototype theory
  • 4 The theory of idealised cognitive models
  • 4.1 Sources of typicality effects
  • 4.1.1 The simplest type of typicality effects
  • 4.1.2 Typicality effects due to cluster models
  • 4.1.3 Typicality effects due to metonymy
  • 4.1.4 Radial ICMs as a further source of typicality effects
  • 4.2 H ow the theory of ICMs resolves problems with prototype theory
  • 4.3 The structure of ICMs
  • 4.3.1 Image schematic ICMs
  • 4.3.2 Propositional ICMs
  • 4.3.3 Metaphoric ICMs
  • 4.3.4 Metonymic ICMs
  • 4.3.5 Symbolic ICMs
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • 12 Conceptual metaphor theory
  • 1 Literal versus figurative language
  • 1.1 Literal and figurative language as complex concepts
  • 1.1.1 Definitions of literal language
  • 1.1.2 Definitions of non-literal language
  • 1.2 Can the distinction be maintained?
  • 1.2.1 Conventional versus non-conventional language use
  • 1.2.2 Metaphorical versus non-metaphorical language use
  • 1.2.3 Literal truth versus literal falsity in language use
  • 1.2.4 Context-free versus context-dependent language use
  • 2 What is metaphor?
  • 2.1 The traditional view
  • 2.2 Conceptual metaphor
  • 2.2.1 Source versus target domains
  • 2.2.2 The experiential basis of conceptual metaphors
  • 3 Conceptual metaphor theory
  • 3.1 The unidirectionality of metaphor
  • 3.2 Motivation for target and source
  • 3.3 Metaphorical entailments
  • 3.4 Metaphor systems
  • 3.5 Metaphors and image schemas
  • 3.6 Invariance
  • 3.7 The conceptual nature of metaphor
  • 3.8 H iding and highlighting
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • 13 Primary metaphors and conceptualmetonymy
  • 1 A primary metaphor account of conceptual metaphors
  • 1.1 Three problems for conceptual metaphor theory
  • 1.2 Towards a decompositional account of conceptual metaphors
  • 1.2.1 The grounding problem for theories are buildings
  • 1.2.2 A decompositional account of theories are buildings
  • 1.3 Properties of primary conceptual metaphors
  • 1.3.1 Primary metaphors are directly grounded in experience, in primaryscenes
  • 1.3.2 Subscenes are linked in primary metaphors by necessary and sufficient conditions
  • 1.3.3 Primary source and target concepts are simple
  • 1.3.4 Primary metaphors are universal
  • 1.3.5 The distinction between a source and target concerns a qualitative distinction between image a
  • 1.3.6 Mappings between source and target, in primary metaphors, areasymmetric
  • 1.3.7 Primary conceptual metaphors constitute ‘one shot’ mappings between concepts across differ
  • 1.4 Consequences of primary metaphor theory
  • 2 Conceptual metonymy
  • 2.1 What is metonymy?
  • 2.2 The conceptual basis of metonymy
  • 2.3 Conceptual metonymy as a domain highlighting operation
  • 2.4 Different metonymic phenomena
  • 2.5 Metonymy–metaphor interaction
  • 2.5.1 Metaphtonymy
  • 2.5.2 The metonymic basis of metaphor
  • 2.6 A typology of conceptual metonymy
  • 2.6.1 Motivating relationships for metonymies
  • 2.6.2 Vehicles for metonymy
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • Part III: Semantic structure
  • 14 What is a cognitive linguistics approach to semantic structure?
  • 1 Guiding principles
  • 1.1 Semantic structure is encyclopaedic
  • 1.1.1 An example
  • 1.1.2 The process of activating encyclopaedic knowledge: construal
  • 1.2 Meaning construction entails simulations
  • 1.2.1 An example
  • 1.2.2 The role of language in meaning construction
  • 2 Formal Semantics
  • 2.1 Meaning, truth and reality
  • 2.1.1 Object language versus metalanguage
  • 2.1.2 The inconsistency of natural language
  • 2.1.3 Sentences and propositions
  • 2.2 Truth-conditional semantics and formal linguistics
  • 2.2.1 Compositionality of meaning
  • 2.2.2 Translating natural language into a metalanguage
  • 2.2.3 Semantic interpretation and matching
  • 3 Comparison with the cognitive linguistics approachto semantic structure
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • 15 The encyclopaedic approach to semantic structure I: overview
  • 1 The dictionary view of linguistic meaning
  • 1.1 The characteristics of the dictionary view
  • 1.2 A case study in pragmatics: relevance theory
  • 1.3 Problems with the dictionary view
  • 2 The encyclopaedic view of linguistic meaning
  • 2.1 No principled distinction between semantics and pragmatics
  • 2.2 Encyclopaedic knowledge is structured
  • 2.2.1 Conventional knowledge
  • 2.2.2 Generic knowledge
  • 2.2.3 Intrinsic knowledge
  • 2.2.4 Characteristic knowledge
  • 2.2.5 Four continua
  • 2.2.6 Centrality
  • 2.3 There is a distinction between encyclopaedic knowledge andcontextual information
  • 2.4 Lexical expressions facilitate access to encyclopaedic knowledge
  • 2.5 Encyclopaedic knowledge is dynamic
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • 16 The encyclopaedic approach to semantic structure II: two theories
  • 1 Frame Semantics
  • 1.1 What is a semantic frame?
  • 1.2 Frames in cognitive psychology
  • 1.2.1 Attributes and values
  • 1.2.2 Structural invariants
  • 1.2.3 Simulations
  • 1.3 The commercial event frame
  • 1.4 Speech event frames
  • 1.5 Consequences of adopting a frame-based model
  • 1.5.1 Words and categories are dependent on frames
  • 1.5.2 Frames provide a particular perspective
  • 1.5.3 Scene-structuring frames
  • 1.5.4 Alternate framing of a single situation
  • 2 Cognitive Grammar and the theory of domains
  • 2.1 What is a domain?
  • 2.2 Basic versus abstract domains
  • 2.3 Other characteristics of domains
  • 2.3.1 Dimensionality
  • 2.3.2 Locational versus configurational domains
  • 2.4 Deploying domains in the service of linguistically mediated meaning
  • 2.4.1 Profile/base organisation
  • 2.4.2 Active zones
  • 2.5 Construal
  • 2.5.1 Selection
  • 2.5.2 Perspective
  • 2.5.3 Abstraction
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • 17 Network approaches to semantic structure
  • 1 Lexical versus compositional semantics: a false dichotomy
  • 1.1 Word meaning is protean in nature
  • 1.2 The conceptual nature of meaning construction
  • 1.3 Grammatical constructions are independently meaningful
  • 2 Words as radial categories
  • 2.1 The nature of polysemy
  • 2.2 The polysemy approach to over
  • 2.3 Lakoff’s full-specification approach
  • 2.3.1 Image schema transformations
  • 2.3.2 Metaphorical extensions
  • 2.4 Problems with the full-specification approach
  • 2.4.1 Polysemy and vagueness: the role of context
  • 2.4.2 The polysemy fallacy: unconstrained methodology
  • 2.5 The Principled Polysemy approach
  • 2.5.1 Distinguishing between senses
  • 2.5.2 Establishing the prototypical sense
  • 2.5.3 Illustration of a radial category based on Principled Polysemy
  • 2.5.4 Beyond prepositions
  • 2.6 Criticisms of principled polysemy
  • 3 Langacker’s network conception
  • 3.1 Schemas versus instances
  • 3.2 The network model
  • 4 The importance of context for polysemy
  • 4.1 Usage context: subsenses
  • 4.2. Sentential context: facets
  • 4.3 Knowledge context: ways of seeing
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • 18 Access Semantics and meaning construction
  • 1 Design features for meaning construction
  • 1.1 Language employs two qualitatively distinct types of reference
  • 1.2 Semantic structure, encoded by linguistic referential vehicles, relates to knowledge of two qual
  • 2 The linguistic focus hypothesis
  • 3 The architecture of Access Semantics
  • 3.1 Semantic representation in Access Semantics
  • 3.1.1 Lexical concepts
  • 3.1.2 cognitive models
  • 3.2 The cognitive model profile
  • 3.2.1 An example: [france]
  • 3.2.2 Primary versus secondary cognitive models
  • 3.2.3 Access site
  • 3.2.4 The individual nature of cognitive model profiles
  • 3.3 Semantic composition
  • 3.4 Interpretation
  • 3.4.1 An example of interpretation
  • 3.4.2 Constraints
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • 19 Mental spaces and discourse meaning
  • 1 Key assumptions of mental spaces theory
  • 1.1 Formal Semantics revisited
  • 1.2 The nature of meaning in mental spaces theory
  • 1.3 An overview of mental spaces theory
  • 1.3.1 The lenient father interpretation
  • 1.3.2 The stern father interpretation
  • 1.3.3 The role interpretation
  • 1.3.4 Discussion
  • 2 The architecture of mental space construction
  • 2.1 Space builders
  • 2.2 Elements
  • 2.3 Properties and relations
  • 2.4 Mental space lattices
  • 2.5 Counterparts and connectors
  • 2.6 The Access Principle
  • 2.7 Roles and values
  • 3 An illustration of mental space construction
  • 4 The dynamic nature of meaning construction
  • 4.1 Tense and aspect in English
  • 4.2 The tense–aspect system in mental spaces theory
  • 4.3 Epistemic distance
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • 20 Conceptual blending and semantic creativity
  • 1 The origins of blending theory
  • 1.1 Problem 1: metaphor
  • 1.2 Problem 2: counterfactual disanalogies
  • 2 Towards a theory of conceptual integration
  • 2.1 The nature of integration networks
  • 2.2 That surgeon is a butcher: the blending theory account
  • 2.3 Bill Clinton as French President: the blending theory account
  • 3 The nature of blending
  • 3.1 The elements of conceptual blending
  • 3.2 Further linguistic examples
  • 3.2.1 Boat race
  • 3.2.2 XYZ constructions
  • 3.2.3 Formal blends
  • 3.2.4 Non-linguistic examples
  • 4 Vital relations and compressions
  • 4.1 Vital relations
  • 4.2 A taxonomy of vital relations and their compressions
  • 4.2.1 time
  • 4.2.2 space
  • 4.2.3 representation
  • 4.2.4 change
  • 4.2.5 role–value
  • 4.2.6 analogy
  • 4.2.7 disanalogy
  • 4.2.8 part-whole
  • 4.2.9 cause–effect
  • 4.3 Disintegration and decompression
  • 5 A taxonomy of integration networks
  • 5.1 Simplex networks
  • 5.2 Mirror networks
  • 5.3 Single-scope networks
  • 5.4 Double-scope networks
  • 6 Multiple blending
  • 7 Constraining blending theory
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • Part IV: Grammar
  • 21 What is a cognitive linguistics approach to grammar?
  • 1 Guiding principles
  • 1.1 The symbolic thesis
  • 1.2 The usage-based thesis
  • 2 Formal approaches to grammar
  • 2.1 Background: the rise of Transformational Grammar
  • 2.2 Assumptions of Transformational Grammar
  • 2.3 The nature of Transformational Grammar
  • 3 Comparison with cognitive linguistics approaches to grammar
  • 3.1 Lexicon–grammar continuum versus autonomous syntax
  • 3.2 Inventory versus derivational system
  • 3.3 The status of constructions
  • 3.4 Schemas versus rules
  • 3.5 Redundancy versus economy
  • 3.6 Conventionality versus regularity
  • 3.7 ‘Scaffolding’ versus ‘building blocks’
  • 3.8 Constraints on models of grammar
  • 3.9 Sanctioning and grammaticality
  • 3.10 Emphasis on formalism
  • 4 Three cognitive linguistics approaches to grammar
  • 4.1 Cognitive Grammar
  • 4.2 Construction Grammars
  • 4.3 Cognitive linguistics theories of grammaticalisation
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • 22 Cognitive Grammar I: lexical classes
  • 1 The semantic basis of word classes
  • 2 Nominal predications: nouns
  • 2.1 Bounding
  • 2.2 Homogeneity versus heterogeneity
  • 2.3 Expansibility and contractibility versus replicability
  • 2.4 Abstract nouns
  • 3 Nominal versus relational predications
  • 4 Relational predications: temporal versus atemporal relations
  • 4.1 Temporal relations: verbs
  • 4.1.1 Simple and complex temporal relations
  • 4.2 Atemporal relations
  • 4.2.1 Simple and complex atemporal relations
  • 4.2.2 Adjectives and adverbs
  • 4.2.3 Adpositions
  • 4.2.4 Participles
  • 4.2.5 Infinitives
  • 5 Lexical classes: an overview
  • 6 Nominal grounding predications
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • 23 Cognitive Grammar II: constructions
  • 1 Constituency in symbolic units
  • 2 Phrases as constructions
  • 2.1 Heads and dependents
  • 2.2 Correspondence
  • 2.3 Profile determinacy
  • 2.4 Conceptual autonomy versus conceptual dependence
  • 2.4.1 Complements
  • 2.4.2 Modifiers
  • 2.4.3 Comparison with dependency in formal linguistics
  • 2.5 Constituency
  • 2.6 The prototypical grammatical construction
  • 3 Words as constructions
  • 3.1 Phonological autonomy and dependence
  • 3.2 Semantic autonomy and dependence
  • 3.3. Prototypical stems and affixes
  • 3.4 Composite structure
  • 3.5 Constructional schemas
  • 3.6 An example: agreement
  • 4 Clauses as constructions
  • 4.1 Valence at the clause level
  • 4.1.1 Arguments versus modifiers
  • 4.1.2 Copular clauses
  • 4.2 Grammatical functions and transitivity
  • 4.2.1 Grammatical functions and the transitive clause
  • 4.2.2 Intransitive clauses
  • 4.2.3 Ditransitive clauses
  • 4.3 Case
  • 4.3.1 Correlated and uncorrelated case systems: a definition
  • 4.3.2 Correlated case systems: a case study
  • 4.4 Marked coding: the passive construction
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • 24 Cognitive Grammar III: the verb string
  • 1 English verbs: a brief overview
  • 2 The clausal head and the grounding predication
  • 3 The clausal head
  • 3.1 The clausal head complex
  • 3.2 The passive construction: [be2 [perf3 [V]]]
  • 3.3 The progressive construction: [be1 [-ing [V]]]
  • 3.4 The perfect construction: [have [perf4 [V]]]
  • 4 The clausal grounding predication
  • 4.1 Grounding: a recap
  • 4.1.1 Modality
  • 4.1.2 Tense
  • 4.2 The epistemic model
  • 4.3 Modality revisited
  • 4.4 Potential and projected reality
  • 5 Lexical aspect
  • 5.1 Situation types: an overview
  • 5.2 Perfective and imperfective processes
  • 5.3 Aspect and the count/mass distinction
  • 5.3.1 Perfective
  • 5.3.2 Imperfective
  • 5.4 Situation types: Cognitive Grammar compared to Vendler (1967)
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • 25 Construction Grammar I: accounting for irregularity in grammar
  • 1 Towards a typology of idiomatic expressions
  • 1.1 Decoding and encoding idioms
  • 1.2 Grammatical versus extragrammatical idioms
  • 1.3 Substantive versus formal idioms
  • 1.4 Idioms with and without pragmatic point
  • 1.5 Familiar pieces familiarly arranged
  • 1.6 Familiar pieces unfamiliarly arranged
  • 1.7 Unfamiliar pieces familiarly arranged
  • 1.8 Unfamiliar pieces unfamiliarly arranged
  • 1.9 Overall evaluation
  • 2 Two case studies
  • 2.1 The let alone construction
  • 2.2 The what’s X doing Y construction
  • 3 The architecture of Construction Grammar
  • 3.1 Construction Grammar: an overview
  • 3.2 The status of the ‘construction’ in Construction Grammar
  • 3.3 Compositionality in Construction Grammar
  • 3.4 Construction Grammar as usage-based theory
  • 4 Comparing Construction Grammar with Cognitive Grammar
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • 26 Construction Grammar II: accounting for generalisations in grammar
  • 1 Towards a constructional account of argument structure constructions
  • 1.1 Assumptions
  • 1.2 Defining a construction
  • 1.3 Advantages of a constructional approach to verb–argument structure
  • 1.3.1 A voids implausible verb senses
  • 1.3.2 Avoids circularity
  • 1.3.3 Semantic parsimony
  • 1.3.4 Compositionality
  • 2 The relationship between verbs and constructions
  • 2.1 What is the nature of verb meaning?
  • 2.2 What is the nature of constructional meaning?
  • 2.3 When can a given verb occur in a given construction?
  • 2.4 Argument roles
  • 2.5 Constructional profiling
  • 2.6 Fusion
  • 3 Relationships between constructions
  • 3.1 Polysemy links
  • 3.2 Subpart links
  • 3.3 Instance links
  • 3.4 Metaphorical extension links
  • 4 Three constructions
  • 4.1 The English ditransitive construction (x causes y to receive z)
  • 4.2 The English caused motion construction (x causes y to move z)
  • 4.3 The English resultative construction
  • 5 Other Construction Grammar approaches
  • 5.1 Radical Construction Grammar
  • 5.1.1 Taxonomy of constructions
  • 5.1.2 Emphasis on diversity
  • 5.1.3 Five key features of RCG
  • 5.2 Embodied Construction Grammar
  • 5.2.1 Emphasis on language processing
  • 5.2.2 Analysis and simulation
  • 6 Comparing constructional approaches to grammar
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • 27 The evolution of grammar
  • 1 The nature of grammaticalisation
  • 1.1 Form change
  • 1.2 Meaning change
  • 2 Metaphorical extension approaches
  • 2.1 The evolution of grammatical concepts
  • 2.2 Metaphorical extension
  • 2.3 The grammaticalisation continuum
  • 2.4 The role of discourse context
  • 2.5 The microstructure and macrostructure of grammaticalisation
  • 2.6 Case study I: object-to-space
  • 2.7 Case study II: space-to-possession
  • 3 Invited inferencing theory
  • 3.1 From invited inference to coded meaning
  • 3.2 Subjectification
  • 3.3 Intersubjectification
  • 3.4 The status of metaphor in invited inferencing theory
  • 3.5 Case study: the evolution of must
  • 4 The subjectification approach
  • 4.1 The nature of subjectification
  • 4.2 Case study I: be going to
  • 4.3 Case study II: the evolution of auxiliaries from verbs of motionor posture
  • 5 Comparison of the three approaches: be going to
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • Part V: Applications and extensions of cognitive linguistics
  • 28 Language, society and discourse
  • 1 Rethinking cognitive linguistics socially
  • 1.1 Joint action, coordination and convention
  • 1.2 Linguistic symbols and common ground
  • 1.3 Encyclopaedic meaning and shared meaning
  • 1.4 Meaning as construal and construal for communication
  • 2 Meaning and social reality
  • 2.1 Levels of meaning: competency versus affordances
  • 2.2 Types of meaning construction
  • 2.3 Properties of social constructions
  • 3 Cognitive sociolinguistics
  • 3.1 What is the nature of cognitive sociolinguistics?
  • 3.2 A case study: cognitive dialectology
  • 4 Cognitive critical discourse analysis
  • 4.1 From CDA to cognitive CDA
  • 4.2 A case study: critical metaphor analysis
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • 29 Text, narrative and literature
  • 1 Narrative
  • 1.1 Towards a theory of narrative in human cognition
  • 1.1.1 Domains
  • 1.1.2 Strata
  • 1.1.3 Parameters
  • 1.2 The literary mind
  • 1.2.1 Events are actions
  • 1.2.2 The image-schematic structure of events
  • 1.2.3 Variants of events are actions
  • 1.2.4 Projection of non-action stories
  • 1.2.5 Creative blends
  • 2 Cognitive poetics
  • 2.1 The foci of cognitive poetics
  • 2.2 The nature of literariness
  • 2.3 Prototypicality in literature
  • 2.4 Cognitive poetic applications
  • 2.4.1 Conceptual metaphor
  • 2.4.2 Conceptual blending
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • 30 Gesture and sign language
  • 1 The nature of gesture
  • 1.1 Classifying gestures
  • 1.2 Why we gesture
  • 2 Gestural studies in cognitive linguistics
  • 2.1 Image schemas
  • 2.2 Conceptual metaphor
  • 2.3 Conceptual metonymy
  • 2.4 Mental spaces and blending
  • 2.5 Construal, framing and perspective
  • 3 Sign language studies in cognitive linguistics
  • 3.1 Articulatory parallels between spoken and signed languages
  • 3.2 Cognitive iconicity
  • 3.3 Metaphor
  • 3.4 Metonymy
  • 3.5 Mental spaces and blending
  • 4 Implications of cognitive approaches to gesture and signlanguages
  • SUMMARY
  • FURTHER READING
  • DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • References
  • Index
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