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Abstract artworks 'speak' to fewer people and have less to 'say' than figurative works ...
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Sullivan Karen. - : NAKALA - https://nakala.fr (Huma-Num - CNRS), 2021
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Why Would We Rather Peg Out Than Simply Die?—How Do game Metaphors Help Us Deal with Death Across Languages and Cultures?
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Everyone "leaves" the world eventually: culture-based homogeneity and variation in Death Is Departure
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Chinese L2 acquisition of sense relatedness for shàng “to go up”
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Being-clauses in Historical Corpora and the US Second Amendment
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Comparing word sense distinctions with bilingual comparable corpora: a pilot study of adjectives in English and Spanish
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Comparing word sense distinctions with bilingual comparable copora: a pilot study of adjectives in English and Spanish
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Integrating constructional semantics and conceptual metaphor
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Abstract:
Conceptual Metaphor Theory (CMT) aims to represent the conceptual structure of metaphors rather than the structure of metaphoric language. The theory does not explain which aspects of metaphoric language evoke which conceptual structures, for example. However, other theories within cognitive linguistics may be better suited to this task. These theories, once integrated, should make building a unified model of both the conceptual and linguistic aspects of metaphor possible. First, constructional approaches to syntax provide an explanation of how particular constructional slots are associated with different functions in evoking metaphor. Cognitive Grammar is especially effective in this regard. Second, Frame Semantics helps explain how the words or phrases that fill the relevant constructional slots evoke the source and target domains of metaphor. Though these theories do not yet integrate seamlessly, their combination already offers explanatory benefits, such as allowing generalizations across metaphoric and non-metaphoric language, and identifying the words that play a role in evoking metaphors, for example.
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Keyword:
1203 Language and Linguistics; 3310 Linguistics and Language; Cognitive grammar; Conceptual Metaphor Theory; Construction grammar; Frame semantics; Invariance principle
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URL: https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:535936
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Are dead artists' paintings more lively? - Agency in description of artworks before and after an artist's death
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Why suave movimiento isn't 'smooth movement': a corpus comparison of polysemous adjectives in English and Spanish
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With the future coming up behind them: evidence that time approaches from behind in Vietnamese
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If you study a word do you use it more often? Lexical repetition priming in a corpus of Natural Semantic Metalanguage publications
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Judging a book by its cover (and its background): effects of the metaphor intelligence is brightness on ratings of book images
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Visibility and economy as dimensions of metaphoric language
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