Home Linguistics & Semiotics Red dogs and rotten mealies: How Zulus talk about anger
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Red dogs and rotten mealies: How Zulus talk about anger

  • John R. Taylor and Thandi G. Mbense
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Speaking of Emotions
This chapter is in the book Speaking of Emotions

Chapters in this book

  1. I-XXII I
  2. I. The conceptualisation of emotions across cultures: national character through time
  3. “Sadness” and “anger” in Russian: The non-universality of the so-called “basic human emotions” 3
  4. The cultural dynamics of “national character”: The case of the new Russians 29
  5. Russian “national character” and Russian language: A rejoinder to H. Mondry and J. Taylor 49
  6. Omoiyari as a core Japanese value: Japanese-style empathy? 55
  7. Sound symbolic emotion words in Japanese 83
  8. Cultural variation in the conceptualisation of emotions: A historical study 99
  9. II. Different approaches to basic emotions: anger and fear
  10. Are there any emotion-specific metaphors? 127
  11. The metonymic and metaphorical conceptualisation of anger in Polish 153
  12. Red dogs and rotten mealies: How Zulus talk about anger 191
  13. The conceptualisation of the domain of FEAR in Modern Greek 227
  14. Go to the devil: Some metaphors we curse by 253
  15. III. Expressing emotions across languages: grammar and discourse
  16. The conceptualisation of emotional causality by means of prepositional phrases 273
  17. On emotions that one can “immerse into”, “fall into” and “come to”: the semantics of a few Russian prepositional constructions 295
  18. The ideology of honour, respect, and emotion in Tagalog 331
  19. Vagueness as a euphemistic strategy 357
  20. The language of emotion: An analysis of Dholuo on the basis of Grace Ogot’s novel Miaha 375
  21. TIRED and EMOTIONAL - On the semantics and pragmatics of emotion verb complementation 409
  22. Index 441
  23. 445-446 445
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