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Metonymy as concept: A metaphor for rhetoric, not for thought
Published/Copyright:
January 23, 2006
Published Online: 2006-01-23
Published in Print: 2003-11-18
Copyright © 2003 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG
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Articles in the same Issue
- Thomas A. Sebeok: In memoriam
- A bibliography of his writings 19422001
- Opening remarks, July 6, 1992, for the seminar Semiotics in the United States held in Urbino, Italy
- Gérard Deledalle: In memoriam
- Living signs in a rigidly patterned world: How healthy can it be?
- Mobius and paradox: On the abstract structure of boundary events in semiotic systems
- Dialogic signifiers: Reiteration and recapitulation in the Odyssey
- On diagrams for Peirces 10, 28, and 66 classes of signs
- The semiotics of signlessness: A Buddhist doctrine of signs
- Nonverbal interaction between hitchhikers and drivers
- Motifs with messages: Ceramic objects as forms of communication
- Industrial ekphrasis: The dialectic of word and image in mass cultural production
- Norm, error, and the structure of rationality: The case study of the knight-knave paradigm
- A set-theoretic approach to indication and indexicality in photography
- Possible worlds and the concept of reference in the semiotics of theater
- Tendances actuelles de la sémiotique au Canada. Etude de sociologie de la production et de la diffusion de la connaissance scientifique
- Concept evaluation in focus groups: Semantic fields and evaluative strategies
- Le rôle de la répétition dans la représentation du sens et son approche statistique par la mÉthode ALCESTE
- Names are more than names: A note about the name Uexküll
- Differential uses of okay, right, and alright, and their function in signaling perspective shift or maintenance in a map task
- Language choice as index: The case of India
- Farewell to brass tacks
- Sebeotics at the threshold: Reflections around a brief Sebeok introduction
- Metonymy as concept: A metaphor for rhetoric, not for thought