Abstract
The various incarnations of cognitive linguistics can be characterized by a common contextualized view on linguistic structure. Emerging from this philosophical cornerstone of the cognitive-linguistic enterprise is a growing body of research that systematically inquires into the intricate interplay of the cognitive, social and situational dimensions determining grammatical and lexical choice. The present paper ties in with current explorations of the interface between cognition, pragmatics and grammar through a corpus-based study of the grammatical and discursive construction of purpose. We argue that constructions marking such goal-oriented actions provide a valuable resource for the study of the grammar-discourse interface, because they (implicitly or explicitly) involve a positioning on various axes, including modal, temporal, force-dynamic and interpersonal.
In order to answer the onomasiological question of how purpose is expressed in discourse, and how the above axes interact in motivating the choice for a specific grammatical construction, we conducted an exploratory corpus study, based on authentic German data. The specific text genre that we selected for our analysis is that of corporate mission statements (Leitbilder), which provide an interesting locus for investigating purposivity, since they contain a concise statement of an organization’s chief purpose for existence. A qualitative analysis reveals that this genre makes use of specific grammatical patterns that profile positions and developments along different conceptual dimensions. This conceptual multidimensionality provides the possibility to simultaneously highlight or background different aspects associated with constructions of purpose.
© 2013 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co.
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Articles in the same Issue
- Masthead
- Editorial
- Analyzing stative dimensional verbs in frames
- Some factors that determine the outcome of lexical competition in language production: A corpus-based analysis of Russian speech errors
- Beyond the sentence: Towards a cognitive-linguistic approach to textual reference
- Inter-coder reliability of categorising force-dynamic events in human-technology interaction
- Differing strategies in English and Japanese word segmentation: A computational-psycholinguistic approach to bootstrapping the lexicon
- ‘Can I ask you something?’: The influence of functional factors on the L1-acquisition of yes-no questions in English
- Constructional ‘scene encoding’ and acquisition: Mothers’ use of argument structure constructions in English child-directed speech
- Constructions of purpose: A corpus-based analysis of corporate mission statements
- The rise of temporal expressions in the history of Japanese: A preliminary account
- Three ways to view a sonnet: Metaphor and poetic structure in three translations of Shakespeare’s sonnet XC
- Go mad – come true – run dry : Metaphorical motion, semantic preference(s) and deixis
- Beyond conflation patterns: The encoding of motion events in Kiezdeutsch