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9780582239661

An Introduction to Cognitive Linguistics

by ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780582239661

  • ISBN10:

    0582239664

  • Edition: 2nd
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2007-01-01
  • Publisher: Pearson ESL
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Supplemental Materials

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Summary

Cognitive linguists share the belief that language is based on our experience of the world. Although scientific in its claims, cognitive linguistics appeals to the intuitive feeling that our use of language is related to how we perceive things and situations around us. This comprehensive text provides a clear introduction to the major approaches that are guided by these assumptions. It is the first text to draw together all the important aspects of both cognitive semantics and syntax and it includes original proposals for a cognitive theory of word-formation and cognitive hierarchies. An Introduction to Cognitive Linguistics explains the central concepts and the assumptions on which they are based in a clear and logical style, tracing their historical roots in linguistics or psychology. Chapters consider the mental process of categorization and its result, the cognitive categories which influence our use of words, the role of metaphor for understanding abstract concepts and analyse attempts to define clause patterns, word classes and other aspects of syntax based on general cognitive principles. This text also brings together issues which have not originated in cognitive linguistic research, but have benefited from being put on a cognitive basis, namely iconicity, grammaticalization, lexical change and language teaching.

Table of Contents

Typographical conventions
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Prototypes and Categories
Colours, squares, birds and cups: early empirical research into lexical categories
The internal structure of categories: prototypes, attributes, family resemblances and gestalt
Context-dependence and cultural models
Levels of Categorization
Basic level categories of organisms and concrete objects
Superordinate categories and experiential hierarchies
Subordinate categories, composite terms and word-formation
Basic level categories and basic experiences: actions, events, properties, states and locations
Conceptual Metaphors and Metonymies
Metaphors and metonymies: from figures of speech to conceptual systems
Metaphors, metonymies and the structure of emotion categories
Metaphors as a way of thinking; examples from science and politics
Figure and Ground
Figure and ground, trajector and landmark: early research into prepositions
Figure, ground and two metaphors: a cognitive explanation of simple clause patterns
Other types of prominence and cognitive processing
The Frame and Attention Approach
Frames and scripts
Event-frames and the windowing of attention
Language-specific framing and its use in narratives
Other Issues in Cognitive Linguistics
Iconicity
Grammaticalization
Lexical change and prototypicality
Effects on foreign language teaching
Conclusion
References
Index
Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved.

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