Chapter 7. The sensori-semantic clustering of ideophonic meaning in Pastaza Quichua
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        Janis B. Nuckolls
        
 
Abstract
I formulate an approach to ideophone semantics which, though based on a corpus from Pastaza Quichua, a South American indigenous language, has potential for analyzing the semantics of ideophone systems more generally. Research on ideophones’ formal properties has preoccupied an increasing number of scholars, while systematic semantic analyses are lagging. Ideophones’ semantics pose challenges because of their intonation and gesture, sound symbolism, and sensory complexity. These qualities require an approach going beyond the traditional mono-sensory classifications, which have dominated ideophones’ semantic descriptions. Using a sensory cluster diagram featuring an implicational logic based on 10 super- and subcategories of sensory experience, this paper analyzes a sample of ideophones drawn from an online corpus featuring 500 archived ideophones.
Abstract
I formulate an approach to ideophone semantics which, though based on a corpus from Pastaza Quichua, a South American indigenous language, has potential for analyzing the semantics of ideophone systems more generally. Research on ideophones’ formal properties has preoccupied an increasing number of scholars, while systematic semantic analyses are lagging. Ideophones’ semantics pose challenges because of their intonation and gesture, sound symbolism, and sensory complexity. These qualities require an approach going beyond the traditional mono-sensory classifications, which have dominated ideophones’ semantic descriptions. Using a sensory cluster diagram featuring an implicational logic based on 10 super- and subcategories of sensory experience, this paper analyzes a sample of ideophones drawn from an online corpus featuring 500 archived ideophones.
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Prelim pages i
 - Table of contents v
 - Editors and contributors vii
 - Abbreviations and symbols ix
 - Introduction: Ideophones, mimetics, and expressives 1
 - 
                            Part I. Phonology and morphology
 - Chapter 1. ‘Ideophone’ as a comparative concept 13
 - Chapter 2. The phonological structure of Japanese mimetics and motherese 35
 - Chapter 3. Monosyllabic and disyllabic roots in the diachronic development of Japanese mimetics 57
 - Chapter 4. Cross-linguistic variation in phonaesthemic canonicity, with special reference to Korean and English 77
 - Chapter 5. Classification of nominal compounds containing mimetics 101
 - 
                            Part II. Semantics and pragmatics
 - Chapter 6. Towards a semantic typological classification of motion ideophones 137
 - Chapter 7. The sensori-semantic clustering of ideophonic meaning in Pastaza Quichua 167
 - Chapter 8. The power of ‘not saying who’ in Czech onomatopoeia 199
 - Chapter 9. Mimetics, gaze, and facial expression in a multimodal corpus of Japanese 229
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                            Part III. Language acquisition and multilingualism
 - Chapter 10. The structure of mimetic verbs in child and adult Japanese 251
 - Chapter 11. Iconicity in L2 Japanese speakers’ multi-modal language use 265
 - Chapter 12. Ideophones as a measure of multilingualism* 303
 - Subject index 323
 - Language index 325
 
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Prelim pages i
 - Table of contents v
 - Editors and contributors vii
 - Abbreviations and symbols ix
 - Introduction: Ideophones, mimetics, and expressives 1
 - 
                            Part I. Phonology and morphology
 - Chapter 1. ‘Ideophone’ as a comparative concept 13
 - Chapter 2. The phonological structure of Japanese mimetics and motherese 35
 - Chapter 3. Monosyllabic and disyllabic roots in the diachronic development of Japanese mimetics 57
 - Chapter 4. Cross-linguistic variation in phonaesthemic canonicity, with special reference to Korean and English 77
 - Chapter 5. Classification of nominal compounds containing mimetics 101
 - 
                            Part II. Semantics and pragmatics
 - Chapter 6. Towards a semantic typological classification of motion ideophones 137
 - Chapter 7. The sensori-semantic clustering of ideophonic meaning in Pastaza Quichua 167
 - Chapter 8. The power of ‘not saying who’ in Czech onomatopoeia 199
 - Chapter 9. Mimetics, gaze, and facial expression in a multimodal corpus of Japanese 229
 - 
                            Part III. Language acquisition and multilingualism
 - Chapter 10. The structure of mimetic verbs in child and adult Japanese 251
 - Chapter 11. Iconicity in L2 Japanese speakers’ multi-modal language use 265
 - Chapter 12. Ideophones as a measure of multilingualism* 303
 - Subject index 323
 - Language index 325