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Concept, Image and Symbol: The Cognitive Basis of Grammar New edition [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 405 pages, kõrgus x laius: 230x155 mm, 131 figures
  • Sari: Cognitive Linguistics Research [CLR] No. 1
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Nov-1991
  • Kirjastus: Mouton de Gruyter
  • ISBN-10: 3110128632
  • ISBN-13: 9783110128635
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 405 pages, kõrgus x laius: 230x155 mm, 131 figures
  • Sari: Cognitive Linguistics Research [CLR] No. 1
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Nov-1991
  • Kirjastus: Mouton de Gruyter
  • ISBN-10: 3110128632
  • ISBN-13: 9783110128635
Teised raamatud teemal:
This research monograph develops and illustrates an innovative theory of linguistic structure, called "cognitive grammar", and applies it to representative phenomena in English and other languages. Cognitive grammar views language as an intergral fact of cognition and claims that grammatical structure cannot be understood or revealingly described independently of semantic considerations. It argues that grammar forms a continuum with the lexicon and is reducible to symbolic relationships (i.e. form-meaning pairings), and consequently that all valid grammatical constructs have some kind of conceptual import.
Preface ix
Introduction
1(32)
Linguistic semantics
2(3)
Dimensions of imagery
5(7)
Grammar as image
12(3)
Grammatical organization
15(4)
Grammatical classes
19(4)
Grammatical constructions
23(9)
Conclusion
32(1)
Inside and outside in Cora
33(26)
Theoretical preliminaries
35(2)
Enclosure
37(4)
Topographical domain
41(4)
Accessibility
45(6)
Scope
51(4)
Implications
55(4)
Nouns and verbs
59(42)
Issues
59(2)
Basic concepts
61(2)
Bounding
63(3)
Interconnection
66(3)
Count vs. mass nouns
69(5)
Relations
74(4)
Processes
78(3)
Motivation
81(4)
Perfective vs. imperfective processes
85(6)
Progressives
91(6)
Abstract nouns
97(3)
Conclusion
100(1)
The English passive
101(48)
Grammar and analyzability
102(14)
Economy
102(2)
Components
104(1)
The symbolic nature of grammar
105(3)
Semantic structure
108(2)
Grammatical morphemes
110(3)
Overtness of grammatical structure
113(2)
Continuum of lexicon, morphology, and syntax
115(1)
Descriptive framework
116(11)
Linguistic organization
116(4)
Syntagmatic combination
120(7)
The passive construction
127(22)
The perfect participle
129(6)
The passive be
135(4)
By-phrases
139(4)
Related phenomena
143(6)
Abstract motion
149(16)
Basic concepts and assumptions
149(3)
The characterization of verbs
152(3)
Objective motion
155(2)
Subjective motion
157(3)
Avenues of semantic extension
160(5)
Grammatical valence
165(24)
Canonical instances
167(7)
Noncanonical instances
174(5)
Further departures from the canon
179(4)
Scope and morphological layering
183(6)
Active zones
189(14)
The phenomenon
189(4)
Analysis
193(3)
Grammatical implications
196(7)
The Yuman auxiliary
203(6)
Transitivity, case, and grammatical relations
209(52)
The conception of actions and events
209(2)
Unmarked linguistic coding
211(15)
Some basic grammatical constructs
211(2)
Selection
213(3)
Heads and tails
216(3)
Complexities
219(3)
Subjective asymmetry
222(2)
Subject and object
224(2)
Marked coding
226(8)
Lexical options
226(3)
Voice
229(1)
Setting vs. participants
230(4)
Case
234(20)
General comments
234(2)
Role archetypes
236(3)
Correlation with grammatical relations
239(2)
Ergative/absolutive systems
241(2)
The structure of events
243(3)
Ergativity
246(3)
Other case phenomena
249(5)
Causative constructions
254(7)
Complex events
254(2)
Causatives derived from intransitives
256(2)
Causatives derived from transitives
258(3)
A usage-based model
261(28)
Two conceptions of generality
261(5)
The network conception
266(6)
General applicability
272(6)
Distribution
278(10)
Conclusion
288(1)
Autonomy and agreement
289(26)
The autonomy issue
289(3)
The symbolic alternative
292(9)
Grammatical markings
301(6)
Agreement
307(6)
Conclusion
313(2)
Subjectification
315(28)
Perspective
315(3)
Grounding
318(6)
The nature of subjectification
324(2)
A spatial example
326(4)
The future sense of `go'
330(3)
Modals
333(4)
Possession and perfect aspect
337(4)
Conclusion
341(2)
Final remarks 343(2)
Notes 345(22)
Chapter 1
345(1)
Chapter 2
346(3)
Chapter 3
349(3)
Chapter 4
352(6)
Chapter 5
358(1)
Chapter 6
359(1)
Chapter 7
359(1)
Chapter 8
360(1)
Chapter 9
360(4)
Chapter 10
364(1)
Chapter 11
365(1)
Chapter 12
365(2)
Bibliography 367(16)
Index 383