Abstract
The categorization alluded to in the title is the assignment of a class of concepts to a lexeme class and/or a syntactic category. The purpose of the paper is to establish converseness of strategies of categorization among languages as a typological concept. It is argued that, quite in general, coding strategies in a given functional domain may be oriented in opposite directions across languages. Particular attention will be paid to the relationship between basic/lexical categorization and derived/syntactic categorization.
A particular kind of converseness is produced by the alternative of basically lexicalizing some concept in grammatical category Ci and transferring it into category Cj by derivational or grammatical operations, or vice versa. The chief empirical domain to illustrate the principle is the categorization of dynamic relational concepts as verbs vs. non-verbs, the latter paired with prominence of light-verb constructions in the grammar. A couple of other functional domains susceptible of the same kind of analysis are analyzed more summarily.
Whenever the elements of a certain conceptual field or functional domain are uniformly lexicalized in some particular category, this is typically coupled with a regular operation of recategorization into its complementary category. In such cases, both the basic category assignment and the presence of the operation shape the structure of sentences and of texts in the language.
©[2012] by Walter de Gruyter Berlin Boston
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- New directions in lexical typology
- The importance of TASTE verbs in some Khoe languages
- Towards a typology of pain predicates
- Converse categorization strategies
- Toward a typology of verbal lexical systems: A case study in Northern Athabaskan
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- Semantic neutrality in complex predicates: Evidence from East and South Asia
- The catalogue of semantic shifts as a database for lexical semantic typology
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- Semantic primes, semantic molecules, semantic templates: Key concepts in the NSM approach to lexical typology
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Masthead
- Erratum
- New directions in lexical typology
- The importance of TASTE verbs in some Khoe languages
- Towards a typology of pain predicates
- Converse categorization strategies
- Toward a typology of verbal lexical systems: A case study in Northern Athabaskan
- Location, existence, and possession: A constructional-typological exploration
- Semantic neutrality in complex predicates: Evidence from East and South Asia
- The catalogue of semantic shifts as a database for lexical semantic typology
- Lexical typology through similarity semantics: Toward a semantic map of motion verbs
- Semantic primes, semantic molecules, semantic templates: Key concepts in the NSM approach to lexical typology