Meanings and Prototypes RLE Linguistics B Grammar Studies in Linguistic Categorization 1st Edition by S.L. Tsohatzidis- Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 1138980668, 978-1138980662
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Product details:
ISBN 10: 1138980668
ISBN 13: 978-1138980662
Author: S.L. Tsohatzidis
There are fewer distinctions in any language than there are distinct things in the universe. If, therefore, languages are ways of representing the universe, a primary function of their elements must be to allow the much more varied kinds of elements out of which the universe is made to be categorized in specific ways. A prototype approach to linguistic categories is a particular way of answering the question of how this categorization operates. It involves two claims. First, that linguistic categorization exploits principles that are not specific to language but characterize most, if not all, processes of cognition. Secondly, that a basic principle by which cognitive and linguistic categories are organized is the prototype principle, which assigns elements to a category not because they exemplify properties that are absolutely required of each one of its members, but because they exhibit, in varying degrees, certain types of similarity with a particular category member which has been established as the best example (or: prototype) of its kind.
The development of the prototype approach into a satisfactory body of theory obviously requires both that its empirical base be enriched, and that its conceptual foundations be clarified. These are the areas where this volume, in its 26 essays, makes original contributions. The first two parts contain discussions in which various kinds of linguistic phenomena are analysed in ways that make essential use of prototype notions. The last two parts contain discussions in which prototype notions themselves become the object, rather than the instrument, of analytical scrutiny.
Table of contents:
Part 1: On the content of prototype categories: questions of word meaning
- A survey of category types in natural language – Cecil H. Brown
- Possible verbs and the structure of events – William Croft
- Prototypical considerations on modal meanings – Steven Cushing
- Belief ascription, metaphor, and intensional identification – Afzal Ballim, Yorick Wilks, John Barnden
- Negated beliefs and non-monotonic reasoning – Ryszard Zuber
- Lexical hierarchies and Ojibwa noun derivation – Richard A. Rhodes
- Some English terms of insult invoking sex organs: evidence of a pragmatic driver for semantics – Keith Allan
- The lexicographical treatment of prototypical polysemy – Dirk Geeraerts
Part 2: On the content of prototype categories: further questions
- Settings, participants, and grammatical relations – Ronald W. Langacker
- On the semantics of compounds and genitives in English – Paul Kay and Karl Zimmer
- A notional approach to the French verbal adjective – Roger McLure and Paul Reed
- Prototypical uses of grammatical resources in the expression of linguistic action – René Dirven
- Toward a theory of syntactic prototypes – Margaret E. Winters
- Accent in prototypical wh-questions – Dwight Bolinger
- Prototypical manners of linguistic action – Anne-Marie Diller
- Where partonomies and taxonomies meet – Barbara Tversky
Part 3: On the context of prototype methods: questions of word meaning
- ‘Prototypes save’: on the uses and abuses of the notion of ‘prototype’ in linguistics and related fields – Anna Wierzbicka
- Prototype theory and its implications for lexical analysis – Adrienne Lehrer
- Prototype theory and lexical semantics – D. A. Cruse
- Representation, prototypes, and centrality – Claude Vandeloise
- A few untruths about ‘lie’ – S.L. Tsolhatzidis
Part 4: On the context of prototype methods: further questions
- On ‘folk’ and ‘scientific’ linguistic beliefs – Roy Harris
- Gestures during discourse: the contextual structuring of thought – Nancy L. Dray and David McNeill
- Why words have to be vague – Roger McLure
- Schemas, prototypes, and models: in search of the unity of the sign – John R. Taylor
- Psycholinguistic semantics, robust vagueness, and the philosophy of language – Terence Horgan
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Tsohatzidis,Meanings and Prototypes,RLE Linguistics


