Article
Publicly Available
Frontmatter
Published/Copyright:
June 5, 2014
Published Online: 2014-6-5
Published in Print: 2014-6-1
©2014 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Censoring metaphors in translation: Shakespeare's Hamlet under Franco
- Cognitive grounding for cross-cultural commercial communication
- Deconstructing a verbal illusion: The ‘No X is too Y to Z’ construction and the rhetoric of negation
- The semantics of the transitive causative construction: Evidence from a forced-choice pointing study with adults and children
- Commentary
- Where does metonymy begin? Some comments on Janda (2011)
- Reply
- Metonymy and word-formation revisited
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Censoring metaphors in translation: Shakespeare's Hamlet under Franco
- Cognitive grounding for cross-cultural commercial communication
- Deconstructing a verbal illusion: The ‘No X is too Y to Z’ construction and the rhetoric of negation
- The semantics of the transitive causative construction: Evidence from a forced-choice pointing study with adults and children
- Commentary
- Where does metonymy begin? Some comments on Janda (2011)
- Reply
- Metonymy and word-formation revisited