Cognitive Linguistics

Höfundur Vyvyan Evans; Melanie Green

Útgefandi Taylor & Francis

Snið ePub

Print ISBN 9780805860146

Útgáfa 1

Útgáfuár 2006

9.190 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Cover
  • Half Title
  • Dedication
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgements
  • Abbreviations, symbols and transcription
  • Part I Overview of the Cognitive Linguistics Enterprise
  • Introduction
  • 1 What does it mean to know a language?
  • 1.1 What is language for?
  • 1.1.1 The symbolic function of language
  • 1.1.2 The interactive function of language
  • 1.2 The systematic structure of language
  • 1.2.1 Evidence for a system
  • 1.2.2 The systematic structure of thought
  • 1.3 What do linguists do?
  • 1.3.1 What?
  • 1.3.2 Why?
  • 1.3.3 How?
  • 1.3.4 Speaker intuitions
  • 1.3.5 Converging evidence
  • 1.4 What it means to know a language
  • 1.5 Summary
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 2 The nature of cognitive linguistics: assumptions and commitments
  • 2.1 Two key commitments
  • 2.1.1 The ‘Generalisation Commitment’
  • 2.1.2 The ‘Cognitive Commitment’
  • 2.2 The embodied mind
  • 2.2.1 Embodied experience
  • 2.2.2 Embodied cognition
  • 2.2.3 Experiential realism
  • 2.3 Cognitive semantics and cognitive approaches to grammar
  • 2.4 Summary
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 3 Universals and variation in language, thought and experience
  • 3.1 Universals in thought and language
  • 3.1.1 Typological universals
  • 3.1.2 Universals in formal linguistics
  • 3.1.3 Universals in cognitive linguistics
  • 3.2 Cross-linguistic patterns in semantic systems
  • 3.2.1 Patterns in the conceptualisation of space
  • 3.2.2 Patterns in the conceptualisation of time
  • 3.3 Cross-linguistic variation in semantic systems
  • 3.3.1 Variation in the conceptualisation of space
  • 3.3.2 Variation in the conceptualisation of time
  • 3.4 Linguistic relativity and cognitive linguistics
  • 3.4.1 Whorf and the Linguistic Relativity Principle
  • 3.4.2 Language as a shaper of thought
  • 3.4.3 The cognitive linguistics position
  • 3.5 Summary
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 4 Language in use: knowledge of language, language change and language acquisition
  • 4.1 Language in use
  • 4.1.1 A usage event
  • 4.1.2 The relationship between usage and linguistic structure
  • 4.1.3 Comprehension and production
  • 4.1.4 Context
  • 4.1.5 Frequency
  • 4.2 Cognitive Grammar
  • 4.2.1 Abstraction, schematisation and language use
  • 4.2.2 Schemas and their instantiations
  • 4.2.3 Partial sanction
  • 4.2.4 The non-reductive nature of schemas
  • 4.2.5 Frequency in schema formation
  • 4.3 A usage-based approach to language change
  • 4.3.1 Historical linguistics and language change
  • 4.3.2 The Utterance Selection Theory of language change
  • 4.3.3 The Generalised Theory of Selection and the Theory of Utterance Selection
  • 4.3.4 Causal mechanisms for language change
  • 4.4 The usage-based approach to language acquisition
  • 4.4.1 Empirical findings in language acquisition
  • 4.4.2 The cognitive view: socio-cognitive mechanisms in language acquisition
  • 4.4.3 Comparing the generative view of language acquisition
  • 4.5 Summary
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • Part II Cognitive Semantics
  • Introduction
  • 5 What is cognitive semantics?
  • 5.1 Guiding principles
  • 5.1.1 Conceptual structure is embodied
  • 5.1.2 Semantic structure is conceptual structure
  • 5.1.3 Meaning representation is encyclopaedic
  • 5.1.4 Meaning construction is conceptualisation
  • 5.2 Phenomena investigated within cognitive semantics
  • 5.2.1 The bodily basis of meaning
  • 5.2.2 Conceptual structure
  • 5.2.3 Encyclopaedic semantics
  • 5.2.4 Mappings
  • 5.2.5 Categorisation
  • 5.2.6 Word meaning and polysemy
  • 5.3 Methodology
  • 5.4 Some comparisons with formal approaches to semantics
  • 5.5 Summary
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 6 Embodiment and conceptual structure
  • 6.1 Image schemas
  • 6.1.1 What is an image schema?
  • 6.1.2 Properties of image schemas
  • 6.1.3 Image schemas and linguistic meaning
  • 6.1.4 A provisional list of image schemas
  • 6.1.5 Image schemas and abstract thought
  • 6.2 Conceptual structure
  • 6.2.1 Semantic structure
  • 6.2.2 Schematic systems
  • 6.3 Summary
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 7 The encyclopaedic view of meaning
  • 7.1 Dictionaries versus encylopaedias
  • 7.1.1 The dictionary view
  • 7.1.2 Problems with the dictionary view
  • 7.1.3 Word meaning versus sentence meaning
  • 7.1.4 The encyclopaedic view
  • 7.2 Frame semantics
  • 7.2.1 What is a semantic frame?
  • 7.2.2 Frames in cognitive psychology
  • 7.2.3 The COMMERCIAL EVENT frame
  • 7.2.4 Speech event frames
  • 7.2.5 Consequences of adopting a frame-based model
  • 7.3 The theory of domains
  • 7.3.1 What is a domain?
  • 7.3.2 Basic, image-schematic and abstract domains
  • 7.3.3 Other characteristics of domains
  • 7.3.4 Profile/base organisation
  • 7.3.5 Active zones
  • 7.4 The perceptual basis of knowledge representation
  • 7.5 Summary
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 8 Categorisation and idealised cognitive models
  • 8.1 Categorisation and cognitive semantics
  • 8.1.1 The classical theory
  • 8.1.2 The definitional problem
  • 8.1.3 The problem of conceptual fuzziness
  • 8.1.4 The problem of prototypicality
  • 8.1.5 Further problems
  • 8.2 Prototype theory
  • 8.2.1 Principles of categorisation
  • 8.2.2 The categorisation system
  • 8.2.3 The vertical dimension
  • 8.2.4 The horizontal dimension
  • 8.2.5 Problems with prototype theory
  • 8.3 The theory of idealised cognitive models
  • 8.3.1 Sources of typicality effects
  • 8.3.2 Radial categories as a further source of typicality effects
  • 8.3.3 Addressing the problems with prototype theory
  • 8.4 The structure of ICMs
  • 8.5 Summary
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 9 Metaphor and metonymy
  • 9.1 Literal versus figurative language
  • 9.1.1 Literal and figurative language as complex concepts
  • 9.1.2 Can the distinction be maintained?
  • 9.2 What is metaphor?
  • 9.3 Conceptual Metaphor Theory
  • 9.3.1 The unidirectionality of metaphor
  • 9.3.2 Motivation for target and source
  • 9.3.3 Metaphorical entailments
  • 9.3.4 Metaphor systems
  • 9.3.5 Metaphors and image schemas
  • 9.3.6 Invariance
  • 9.3.7 The conceptual nature of metaphor
  • 9.3.8 Hiding and highlighting
  • 9.4 Primary Metaphor Theory
  • 9.4.1 Primary and compound metaphors
  • 9.4.2 Experiential correlation
  • 9.4.3 Motivating primary metaphors
  • 9.4.4 Distinguishing primary and compound metaphors
  • 9.5 What is metonymy?
  • 9.6 Conceptual metonymy
  • 9.6.1 Metonymy as an access mechanism
  • 9.6.2 Metonymy-producing relationships
  • 9.6.3 Vehicles for metonymy
  • 9.7 Metaphor-metonymy interaction
  • 9.8 Summary
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 10 Word meaning and radial categories
  • 10.1 Polysemy as a conceptual phenomenon
  • 10.2 Words as radial categories
  • 10.3 The full-specification approach
  • 10.3.1 Image schema transformations
  • 10.3.2 Metaphorical extensions
  • 10.4 Problems with the full-specification approach
  • 10.5 The Principled Polysemy approach
  • 10.5.1 Distinguishing between senses
  • 10.5.2 Establishing the prototypical sense
  • 10.5.3 Illustration of a radial category based on Principled Polysemy
  • 10.5.4 Beyond prepositions
  • 10.6 The importance of context for polysemy
  • 10.6.1 Usage context: subsenses
  • 10.6.2 Sentential context: facets
  • 10.6.3 Knowledge context: ways of seeing
  • 10.7 Summary
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 11 Meaning construction and mental spaces
  • 11.1 Sentence meaning in formal semantics
  • 11.2 Meaning construction in cognitive semantics
  • 11.3 Towards a cognitive theory of meaning construction
  • 11.4 The architecture of mental space construction
  • 11.4.1 Space builders
  • 11.4.2 Elements
  • 11.4.3 Properties and relations
  • 11.4.4 Mental space lattices
  • 11.4.5 Counterparts and connectors
  • 11.4.6 The Access Principle
  • 11.4.7 Roles and values
  • 11.5 An illustration of mental space construction
  • 11.6 The dynamic nature of meaning construction
  • 11.6.1 Tense and aspect in English
  • 11.6.2 The tense-aspect system in Mental Spaces Theory
  • 11.6.3 Epistemic distance
  • 11.7 Summary
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 12 Conceptual blending
  • 12.1 The origins of Blending Theory
  • 12.2 Towards a theory of conceptual integration
  • 12.3 The nature of blending
  • 12.3.1 The elements of conceptual blending
  • 12.3.2 Further linguistic examples
  • 12.3.3 Non-linguistic examples
  • 12.4 Vital relations and compressions
  • 12.4.1 Vital relations
  • 12.4.2 A taxonomy of vital relations and their compressions
  • 12.4.3 Disintegration and decompression
  • 12.5 A taxonomy of integration networks
  • 12.5.1 Simplex networks
  • 12.5.2 Mirror networks
  • 12.5.3 Single-scope networks
  • 12.5.4 Double-scope networks
  • 12.6 Multiple blending
  • 12.7 Constraining Blending Theory
  • 12.8 Comparing Blending Theory with Conceptual Metaphor Theory
  • 12.8.1 Contrasts
  • 12.8.2 When is a metaphor not a blend?
  • 12.8.3 What Blending Theory adds to Conceptual Metaphor Theory
  • 12.9 Summary
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 13 Cognitive semantics in context
  • 13.1 Truth-conditional semantics
  • 13.1.1 Meaning, truth and reality
  • 13.1.2 Object language versus metalanguage
  • 13.1.3 The inconsistency of natural language
  • 13.1.4 Sentences and propositions
  • 13.1.5 Truth-conditional semantics and the generative enterprise
  • 13.1.6 Compositionality of meaning
  • 13.1.7 Translating natural language into a metalanguage
  • 13.1.8 Semantic interpretation and matching
  • 13.1.9 Comparison with cognitive semantics
  • 13.2 Relevance Theory
  • 13.2.1 Ostensive communication
  • 13.2.2 Mutual cognitive environment
  • 13.2.3 Relevance
  • 13.2.4 Explicature and implicature
  • 13.2.5 Metaphor
  • 13.2.6 Comparison with cognitive semantics
  • 13.3 Summary
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • Part III Cognitive Approaches to Grammar
  • Introduction
  • 14 What is a cognitive approach to grammar?
  • 14.1 Guiding assumptions
  • 14.1.1 The symbolic thesis
  • 14.1.2 The usage-based thesis
  • 14.1.3 The architecture of the model
  • 14.2 Distinct cognitive approaches to grammar
  • 14.2.1 The ‘Conceptual Structuring System Model’
  • 14.2.2 Cognitive Grammar
  • 14.2.3 Constructional approaches to grammar
  • 14.2.4 Cognitive approaches to grammaticalisation
  • 14.3 Grammatical terminology
  • 14.3.1 Grammar
  • 14.3.2 Units of grammar
  • 14.3.3 Word classes
  • 14.3.4 Syntax
  • 14.3.5 Grammatical functions
  • 14.3.6 Agreement and case
  • 14.4 Characteristics of the cognitive approach to grammar
  • 14.4.1 Grammatical knowledge: a structured inventory of symbolic units
  • 14.4.2 Features of the closed-class subsystem
  • 14.4.3 Schemas and instances
  • 14.4.4 Sanctioning and grammaticality
  • 14.5 Summary
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 15 The conceptual basis of grammar
  • 15.1 The grammatical subsystem: encoding semantic structure
  • 15.2 Talmy’s ‘Conceptual Structuring System Model’
  • 15.2.1 The configuration of SPACE and TIME
  • 15.2.2 Conceptual alternativity
  • 15.2.3 Schematic systems
  • 15.2.4 The ‘Configurational Structure System’
  • 15.2.5 The ‘Attentional System’
  • 15.2.6 The ‘Perspectival System’
  • 15.2.7 The ‘Force-Dynamics System’
  • 15.3 Langacker’s theory of Cognitive Grammar
  • 15.3.1 The conceptual basis of word classes
  • 15.3.2 Attention
  • 15.3.3 Force-dynamics
  • 15.4 Categorisation and polysemy in grammar: the network conception
  • 15.5 Summary
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 16 Cognitive Grammar: word classes
  • 16.1 Word classes: linguistic categorisation
  • 16.2 Nominal predications: nouns
  • 16.2.1 Bounding
  • 16.2.2 Homogeneity versus heterogeneity
  • 16.2.3 Expansibility and contractibility versus replicability
  • 16.2.4 Abstractions
  • 16.3 Nominal versus relational predications
  • 16.4 Temporal versus atemporal relations
  • 16.4.1 Temporal relations: verbs
  • 16.4.2 Atemporal relations
  • 16.4.3 Class schemas
  • 16.5 Nominal grounding predications
  • 16.5.1 Determiners and quantifiers
  • 16.5.2 Grounding
  • 16.6 Summary
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 17 Cognitive Grammar: constructions
  • 17.1 Phrase structure
  • 17.1.1 Valence
  • 17.1.2 Correspondence
  • 17.1.3 Profile determinacy
  • 17.1.4 Conceptual autonomy versus conceptual dependence
  • 17.1.5 Constituency
  • 17.1.6 The prototypical grammatical construction
  • 17.2 Word structure
  • 17.2.1 Phonological autonomy and dependence
  • 17.2.2 Semantic autonomy and dependence
  • 17.2.3 Prototypical stems and affixes
  • 17.2.4 Composite structure
  • 17.2.5 Constructional schemas
  • 17.2.6 Grammatical morphemes and agreement
  • 17.3 Clauses
  • 17.3.1 Valence at the clause level
  • 17.3.2 Grammatical functions and transitivity
  • 17.3.3 Case
  • 17.3.4 Marked coding: the passive construction
  • 17.4 Summary
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 18 Cognitive Grammar: tense, aspect, mood and voice
  • 18.1 English verbs: form and function
  • 18.2 The clausal head
  • 18.2.1 The passive construction: [be2 [PERF3 [V]]]
  • 18.2.2 The progressive construction: [be1 [-ing [V]]]
  • 18.2.3 The perfect construction: [have [PERF4 [V]]]
  • 18.3 The grounding predication: mood and tense
  • 18.3.1 Mood
  • 18.3.2 Tense
  • 18.3.3 The epistemic model
  • 18.4 Situation aspect
  • 18.4.1 Situation types
  • 18.4.2 Perfective and imperfective PROCESSES
  • 18.4.3 Aspect and the count/mass distinction
  • 18.5 Summary
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 19 Motivating a construction grammar
  • 19.1 Constructions versus ‘words and rules’
  • 19.2 Exploring idiomatic expressions
  • 19.2.1 Typology of idiomatic expressions
  • 19.2.2 Case study I: the let alone construction
  • 19.2.3 Case study II: the what’s X doing Y construction
  • 19.3 Construction Grammar
  • 19.3.1 The Construction Grammar model
  • 19.3.2 Construction Grammar: a ‘broadly generative’ model
  • 19.3.3 Comparing Construction Grammar with Cognitive Grammar
  • 19.4 The ‘Generalisation Commitment’
  • 19.5 Summary
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 20 The architecture of construction grammars
  • 20.1 Goldberg’s construction grammar
  • 20.1.1 Assumptions
  • 20.1.2 Advantages of a constructional approach to verb argument structure
  • 20.1.3 The relationship between verbs and constructions
  • 20.1.4 Relationships between constructions
  • 20.1.5 Case studies
  • 20.2 Radical Construction Grammar
  • 20.2.1 Taxonomy of constructions
  • 20.2.2 Emphasis on diversity
  • 20.2.3 Five key features of RCG
  • 20.3 Embodied Construction Grammar
  • 20.3.1 Emphasis on language processing
  • 20.3.2 Analysis and simulation
  • 20.4 Comparing constructional approaches to grammar
  • 20.5 Summary
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 21 Grammaticalisation
  • 21.1 The nature of grammaticalisation
  • 21.1.1 Form change
  • 21.1.2 Meaning change
  • 21.2 Metaphorical extension approaches
  • 21.2.1 Case study: OBJECT-TO-SPACE
  • 21.2.2 Case study: SPACE-TO-POSSESSION
  • 21.3 Invited Inferencing Theory
  • 21.3.1 Case study: the evolution of must
  • 21.4 The subjectification approach
  • 21.4.1 Case study: be going to
  • 21.4.2 Case study: the evolution of auxiliaries from verbs of motion or posture
  • 21.5 Comparison of the three approaches: be going to
  • 21.6 Summary
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • 22 Cognitive approaches to grammar in context
  • 22.1 Theories of grammar: assumptions, objectives, methodology
  • 22.1.1 Cognitive approaches to grammar
  • 22.1.2 Generative approaches to grammar
  • 22.1.3 Cognitive versus generative models
  • 22.1.4 Functional-typological approaches to grammar
  • 22.2 Core issues in grammar: comparing cognitive and generative accounts
  • 22.2.1 Word classes
  • 22.2.2 Constituency: heads and dependents
  • 22.2.3 The status of tree diagrams
  • 22.2.4 Grammatical functions and case
  • 22.2.5 The verb string: tense, aspect and mood
  • 22.2.6 The passive construction
  • 22.3 Summary
  • Further reading
  • Exercises
  • Part IV Conclusion
  • 23 Assessing the cognitive linguistics enterprise
  • 23.1 Achievements
  • 23.2 Remaining challenges
  • 23.3 Summary
  • Appendix: Tables and Figures
  • References
  • Index
Show More

Additional information

Veldu vöru

Rafbók til eignar

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “Cognitive Linguistics”

Netfang þitt verður ekki birt. Nauðsynlegir reitir eru merktir *

Aðrar vörur

1
    1
    Karfan þín
    An Introduction to Sociolinguistics
    An Introduction to Sociolinguistics
    Veldu vöru:

    Rafbók til eignar

    1 X 6.290 kr. = 6.290 kr.