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Spatial deixis in Afrikaans dictionaries
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Chapters in this book
- I-IV I
- Acknowledgements V
- Introduction: Language and the cognitive construal of space XI
-
Part A Space in language
-
Section 1: Pointing, deixis, and distance
- The Japanese verbal suffixes as indicators of distance and proximity 3
- Demonstratives as locating expressions 29
- ‘Here’ and ‘there’ in Croatian: a case study of an urban standard variety 49
- Prosodic and paralinguistic signals of distance 63
-
Section 2: Conceptualizing space in prepositions and in morphology
- The German über 73
- The separability of German über-: A cognitive approach 109
- Prepositional prototypes 135
- Space and movement in the English verb system 167
- The representation of space in English derivational morphology 197
-
Part Β Space as a cultural artifact
-
Section 3: Can language use cope with space ?
- Spatial deixis in Afrikaans dictionaries 211
- What good are locationals, anyway? 239
- Iconicity in verbal descriptions of space 269
-
Section 4: Variability in the conceptualization of space
- The syntax and semantics of locativised nouns in Zulu 287
- Distinguishing the notion ‘place’ in an Oceanic language 307
- The linguistic, cognitive and cultural variables of the conceptualization of space 329
- Rethinking some universals of spatial language using controlled comparison 345
-
Part C Space as a bridge to other conceptual domains
-
Section 5: From one meaning to another
- Polarity and metaphor in German 373
- Metaphors of ‘total enclosure’ grammaticizing into middle voice markers 395
-
Section 6: From space to time, events, and beyond
- The story of -ing: A subjective perspective 417
- The temporal use of Hawaiian directional particles 455
- Temporal meanings of spatial prepositions in Polish: The case of przez and w 491
- Viewpoint and subjectivity in English inversion 509
- How do we mentally localize different types of spatial concepts? 527
-
Part D Space as an organizing principle of thought
-
Section 7: Discourse as space
- Space in dramatic discourse 553
- How space structures discourse 571
- The (meta-)textual space 599
-
Section 8: Abstract worlds as space
- From one meaning to the next: The effects of polysemous relationships in lexical learning 613
- Metaphorical scenarios of science 649
- Language, space and theography: The case of height vs. depth 679
- List of contributors 691
- Subject Index 697
Chapters in this book
- I-IV I
- Acknowledgements V
- Introduction: Language and the cognitive construal of space XI
-
Part A Space in language
-
Section 1: Pointing, deixis, and distance
- The Japanese verbal suffixes as indicators of distance and proximity 3
- Demonstratives as locating expressions 29
- ‘Here’ and ‘there’ in Croatian: a case study of an urban standard variety 49
- Prosodic and paralinguistic signals of distance 63
-
Section 2: Conceptualizing space in prepositions and in morphology
- The German über 73
- The separability of German über-: A cognitive approach 109
- Prepositional prototypes 135
- Space and movement in the English verb system 167
- The representation of space in English derivational morphology 197
-
Part Β Space as a cultural artifact
-
Section 3: Can language use cope with space ?
- Spatial deixis in Afrikaans dictionaries 211
- What good are locationals, anyway? 239
- Iconicity in verbal descriptions of space 269
-
Section 4: Variability in the conceptualization of space
- The syntax and semantics of locativised nouns in Zulu 287
- Distinguishing the notion ‘place’ in an Oceanic language 307
- The linguistic, cognitive and cultural variables of the conceptualization of space 329
- Rethinking some universals of spatial language using controlled comparison 345
-
Part C Space as a bridge to other conceptual domains
-
Section 5: From one meaning to another
- Polarity and metaphor in German 373
- Metaphors of ‘total enclosure’ grammaticizing into middle voice markers 395
-
Section 6: From space to time, events, and beyond
- The story of -ing: A subjective perspective 417
- The temporal use of Hawaiian directional particles 455
- Temporal meanings of spatial prepositions in Polish: The case of przez and w 491
- Viewpoint and subjectivity in English inversion 509
- How do we mentally localize different types of spatial concepts? 527
-
Part D Space as an organizing principle of thought
-
Section 7: Discourse as space
- Space in dramatic discourse 553
- How space structures discourse 571
- The (meta-)textual space 599
-
Section 8: Abstract worlds as space
- From one meaning to the next: The effects of polysemous relationships in lexical learning 613
- Metaphorical scenarios of science 649
- Language, space and theography: The case of height vs. depth 679
- List of contributors 691
- Subject Index 697