Much mouth much tongue: Chinese metonymies and metaphors of verbal behaviour
Abstract
This paper explores metonymical and metaphorical expressions of verbal behaviour in Chinese. While metonymy features prominently in some of these expressions and metaphor in others, the entire dataset can be best viewed as spanning the metonymy-metaphor-continuum. That is, we observe a gradation of conceptual distance between the source and target which corresponds to the gradation of figurativity. Specifically, roughly half of the expressions we encounter are based on the ORGAN OF SPEECH ARTICULATION FOR SPEECH metonymy and can be considered as clustering around the metonymic pole. The other half can be seen as tending towards the metaphoric pole, as they are largely motivated by conceptual metaphors: (a) VERBAL BEHAVIOUR IS PHYSICAL ACTION, (b) SPEECH IS CONTAINER, (c) ARGUMENT IS WAR (or WORDS ARE WEAPONS) and (d) WORDS ARE FOOD. The interaction between metonymy and metaphor is an important cognitive strategy in the conceptualisation of verbal behaviour. The findings (i) evidence the gradient predictability of idiom meanings based on semantic compositionality, (ii) confirm the hypothesis of a bodily and experiential basis of cognition, (iii) suggest the existence of culture-specific models in the utilization of basic experiences, and (iv) point to the role of emotion in the metaphorisation of verbal behaviour as a socio-emotional domain.
© 2008 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, D-10785 Berlin
Articles in the same Issue
- Tense and cognitive space: On the organization of tense/aspect systems in Bantu languages and beyond
- Three types of conditionals and their verb forms in English and Portuguese
- Much mouth much tongue: Chinese metonymies and metaphors of verbal behaviour
- Subjects in the hands of speakers: An experimental study of syntactic subject and speech-gesture integration
- Book reviews
Articles in the same Issue
- Tense and cognitive space: On the organization of tense/aspect systems in Bantu languages and beyond
- Three types of conditionals and their verb forms in English and Portuguese
- Much mouth much tongue: Chinese metonymies and metaphors of verbal behaviour
- Subjects in the hands of speakers: An experimental study of syntactic subject and speech-gesture integration
- Book reviews