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E-raamat: Concise Thesaurus of Traditional English Metaphors [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

  • Formaat: 384 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 22-Mar-2019
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9780203945643
  • Taylor & Francis e-raamat
  • Hind: 226,19 €*
  • * hind, mis tagab piiramatu üheaegsete kasutajate arvuga ligipääsu piiramatuks ajaks
  • Tavahind: 323,13 €
  • Säästad 30%
  • Formaat: 384 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 22-Mar-2019
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9780203945643

This absorbing collection of metaphors includes a variety of expressions with figurative meanings, like similes, proverbs, slang and catchphrases. It is the result of a lifetime of work on dialect and metaphor and gives an overview of the folk wisdom expressed in figurative expressions. The author draws on his extensive contact with the rural cultures of Dorset, Cornwall, Yorkshire and Lancashire, but has also included a range of sayings from North America, Australia, Scotland and other English speaking countries.

With revised contents and an improved index to make individual entries easier to find, the Concise can be used to check the meaning and the origin of an expression or to avoid mixed metaphors, anachronisms and incongruities. It is a joy to browse long after your original query has been answered.

Introduction ix
Acknowledgements xi
List of abbreviations
xiii
THE HUMAN WORLD
Human relationships
3(5)
Courtship and marriage
3(1)
Babies
4(1)
Children
5(1)
Relations, friends, acquaintances
6(2)
Communications
8(3)
Words and gestures
8(1)
Letters and gifts
9(1)
Newspapers, phones, computers
9(2)
The body, body-care
11(8)
Body and mind
11(1)
The eyes
12(1)
Ears and nose
13(1)
Breathing, mouth and throat
13(1)
Heart, blood, nerves
14(1)
Stomach functions
14(1)
Body fluids, humours
15(1)
Back, limbs
15(2)
Body hygiene
17(2)
Illness and death
19(5)
Disabilities, ailments and injuries
19(1)
The medical profession
20(2)
Death
22(2)
The Home
24(11)
House and contents
24(3)
In the kitchen
27(2)
Wells and pumps
29(1)
Fires
30(2)
House lighting
32(1)
Furniture
32(2)
Calendar and clocks
34(1)
Housework
35(2)
Mending and washing clothes
35(1)
Housekeeping
36(1)
Food and drink
37(14)
Cooking
41(2)
Enjoying food
43(5)
Brewing, drinking
48(2)
Smoking, drugs, hostelries
50(1)
Clothing
51(5)
Clothes and hats
51(3)
Shoes
54(2)
Work
56(6)
Tools
58(2)
Slavery
60(2)
Poverty
62(3)
Riches
65(7)
Money
65(1)
Geological riches
66(1)
Precious objects
66(1)
Trade
66(2)
Servants
68(1)
Butchers
68(1)
Markets and shopping
69(3)
Town life, parks and gardens
72(3)
Farming
75(27)
Gardening
75(1)
Boundaries
76(1)
Barns, middens
77(1)
Farm animals: horses
78(4)
Asses, donkeys and mules
82(1)
Farm dogs
82(1)
Cattle
82(5)
Sheep
87(2)
Goats
89(1)
Pigs
89(2)
Poultry
91(3)
Crops
94(5)
Mills
99(3)
Crafts and skills, industry
102(11)
Machinery
105(1)
Industry, tinkers, scrap-merchants
105(1)
Cloth-workers, weavers, tailors, cobblers
106(7)
The imaginative, spiritual and intellectual life
113(21)
Myths
113(2)
Fables
115(1)
Legends
116(1)
Fairies and witches
117(1)
Superstitions and customs
118(1)
Religions, divination
119(1)
God, the Old Testament
120(2)
The New Testament, Christianity
122(1)
History of the church and her people
123(1)
Church buildings
124(1)
Church services
125(1)
Hell and the devil
126(1)
Purgatory and heaven, ghosts
127(1)
School, reading and writing
128(1)
Books
129(1)
Literature
129(1)
The Classics, Shakespearean and other quotations
130(2)
School subjects
132(2)
The arts
134(5)
Music, musical instruments
134(1)
Dancing
135(1)
Singing songs and telling stories
136(1)
Pictorial and tactile art
137(2)
Sports, games and entertainment
139(22)
Hunting and hawking
139(1)
Hunting with hounds
140(1)
Shooting and fishing
141(1)
Coarse fishing
142(1)
Badger-, bear-, bull- and cock-fighting
143(1)
Horse, pigeon and car-racing
144(1)
Circuses, fairs
145(2)
Plays
147(1)
Theatre
148(1)
Radio, television, other entertainments
148(1)
Children's games
149(1)
Children's toys
150(1)
Indoor games
151(1)
Scoring in games; athletics
152(1)
Water and winter sports, football
153(2)
Cricket and baseball
155(1)
Shinty and other ball games
156(1)
Boxing, wrestling
156(2)
Fencing, climbing and other sports
158(1)
Gambling
158(1)
Card games
159(2)
Travel
161(14)
Steam engines, railways
161(1)
Different countries and peoples
162(1)
Ships and boats
163(1)
Sailing, modem and inland shipping
164(1)
Weather and the oceans, beaches
165(1)
Sailors at sea and in the sea
166(1)
In port, anchors, chains etc.
167(1)
Cargoes, tides
168(1)
Navigation
169(1)
Ships in danger
170(1)
Travelling in carts and coaches
171(1)
Modern travel
172(3)
Beggars, tramps
175(8)
A beggar's meals
176(1)
Roughing it out of doors
177(1)
Sticks and staves
177(1)
Travelling the roads
178(1)
Different towns and places
179(1)
Crossing rivers
180(1)
Across country, gates
181(2)
Criminals, the law
183(7)
Pirates and smugglers
183(1)
Stealing
183(1)
Rustling and poaching
184(1)
Crimes of deceit and violence
185(1)
Murder
186(1)
Bringing to justice
186(2)
Judgement and punishment
188(2)
Naval, military, royalist and political matters
190(15)
The Navy
190(1)
Earlier weapons
191(2)
Armour, cavalry
193(1)
Explosives, guns, artillery, air warfare
194(1)
Battle action
195(1)
Battle tactics
196(1)
Prisoners, forts and camps
197(1)
Royalty, ranks and discipline
198(1)
Military pageantry and history
199(2)
Diplomacy and empire
201(1)
Politics
201(4)
NATURE AND THE ANIMAL WORLD
Skies, landscapes
205(6)
Wind, cloud and rain
205(1)
Thunder, cold weather
206(1)
Stars, moon and seasons
207(1)
Mountains, rocks and earthquakes
207(2)
Water, lakes and rivers
209(2)
Woods
211(2)
Woodland, plants and trees
211(2)
Wild flora
213(2)
Land creatures
215(8)
Animals
215(1)
Fauna of other lands
215(1)
Wolves and foxes
216(1)
Other wild animals
217(1)
Smaller wild animals
218(1)
Dogs
219(1)
Cats
220(2)
Household pets and pests
222(1)
Water creatures
223(4)
Shell-fish
223(1)
Catching and selling fish
224(3)
Birds
227(6)
Birds, eggs, chicks
227(2)
The crow family
229(1)
Raptors
229(1)
Water birds
230(1)
Thrushes, waders and other birds
230(3)
Reptiles and amphibians
233(2)
Insects
235(4)
Bees, wasps etc.
235(1)
Spiders, flies, moths, butterflies
236(1)
Slugs, worms and parasites
237(2)
Bibliography 239(6)
Index 245


Dick Wilkinson is a retired forestry Commission worker who studied Classics, Old English and Old Norse at Cambridge University. Struck by how many words and phrases in English acquired their present meanings through metaphor, he started to note them down. The Thesaurus is the culmination of a lifetimes study of the English language.