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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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Polysemy in Cognitive Linguistics

Selected papers from the International Cognitive Linguistics Conference, Amsterdam, 1997

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Edited by Hubert Cuyckens and Britta E. Zawada
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven / University of South Africa

2001. xxviii, 296 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 3683 8 / EUR 120.00
978 1 55619 894 6 / USD 180.00
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In Cognitive Linguistics, polysemy is regarded as a categorizing phenomenon; i.e., related meanings of words form categories centering around a prototype and bearing family resemblance relations to one another. Under this polysemy = categorization view, the scope of investigation has been gradually broadened from categories in the lexical and lexico-grammatical domain to morphological, syntactic, and phonological categories. The papers in this volume illustrate the importance of polysemy in describing these various categories. A first set of papers analyzes the polysemy of such lexical categories as prepositions and scalar particles, and looks at the import of polysemy in frame-based dictionary definitions. A second set shows that noun classes, case, and locative prefixes constitute meaningful and polysemous categories. Three papers, then, pay attention to polysemy from a psychological perspective, looking for psychological evidence of polysemy in lexical categories.


Table of contents

Editors’ Foreword
vii
Introduction
Hubert Cuyckens and Britta E. Zawada
ix
The Spatial and Non-Spatial Senses of the German Preposition Über
Birgitta Meex
1
Scalar Particles and the Sequential Space Construction
Tuomas Huumo
37
A Frame-Based Approach to Polysemy
Willy Martin
57
Where Do the Senses of Cora Va’a- Come From?
Eugene H. Casad
83
Why Quirky Case Really Isn’t Quirky. Or how to treat dative sickness in Icelandic
Michael B. Smith
115
When a Dance Resembles a Tree. A polysemy analysis of three Setswana noun classes
Kari-Anne Selvik
161
Systemic Polysemy in the Southern Bantu Noun Class System
A.P. Hendrikse
185
Psycholinguistic Perspectives on Polysemy
Raymond W. Gibbs, Jr. and Teenie Matlock
213
The Embodied Approach to the Polysemy of the Spatial Preposition On
Dinara A. Beitel, Raymond W. Gibbs, Jr. and Paul Sanders
241
Processing Polysemous, Homonymous, and Vague Adjectives
Frank Brisard, Gert van Rillaer and Dominiek Sandra
261
Name Index
285
Subject Index
289
Addresses
295