Verlag | Oxford University Press |
Auflage | 2017 |
Seiten | 332 |
Format | 16,3 x 24,0 x 2,8 cm |
Print PDF | |
Gewicht | 655 g |
Artikeltyp | Englisches Buch |
ISBN-10 | 019873672X |
EAN | 9780198736721 |
Bestell-Nr | 19873672EA |
This volume brings together the latest research on the semantics of nouns in a variety of familiar and less well-documented languages. It offers detailed analyses of individual nouns across a range of conceptual domains, including 'people', 'places', and 'living things', with each analysis fully grounded in a unified methodological framework.
This volume brings together the latest research on the semantics of nouns in both familiar and less well-documented languages, including English, Mandarin Chinese, Russian, the Papuan language Koromu, the Dravidian language Solega, and Pitjantjatjara/Yankunytjatjara from Australia. Chapters offer systematic and detailed analyses of scores of individual nouns across a range of conceptual domains, including 'people', 'places', and 'living things', with each analysis fully grounded in a unified methodological framework. They not only cover central theoretical issues specific to the analysis of the domain in question, but also empirically investigate the different types of meaning relations that hold between nouns, such as meronymy, hyponymy, taxonomy, and antonymy.
The collection of studies show how in-depth meaning analysis anchored in a cross-linguistic and cross-domain perspective can lead to unexpected insights into the common and particular ways in which speakers of diff erent languages conceptualize, categorize, and order the world around them. This unique volume brings together a new generation of semanticists from across the globe, and will be of interest to researchers in linguistics, psychology, anthropology, biology, and philosophy.
Inhaltsverzeichnis:
1: Zhengdao Ye: The semantics of nouns: A cross-linguistic and cross-domain perspective
2: Anna Wierzbicka: The meaning of kinship terms: A developmental and cross-linguistic perspective
3: Zhengdao Ye: The semantics of social relation nouns in Chinese
4: Sandy Habib: The meanings of 'angel' in English, Arabic, and Hebrew
5: Carsten Levisen: Personhood constructs in language and thought: New evidence from Danish
6: Carol Priestley: Some key body parts and polysemy: A case study from Koromu (Kesawai)
7: Helen Bromhead: The semantics of standing water places in English, French, and Pitjantjatjara/Yankunytjatjara
8: Michael Roberts: The semantics of demonyms in English: Germans, Queenslanders, and Londoners
9: Aung Si: The semantics of honeybee terms in Solega (Dravidian)
10: Cliff Goddard: Furniture, vegetables, weapons: Functional collective superordinates in the English lexicon
References
Index