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Being a successful speaker of a given language involves control of
the meaning and use of vocabulary items, taking in their lexical
content (what phenomena they refer to), combinatorial behaviour
(what items they occur with) and situational characteristics (e.g.
as colloquial or formal terms). This essential reference book
provides clear information on these aspects for around three
hundred groups of Japanese near-synonyms, supplemented by a wide
range of authentic examples. The result is a clear profile of the
meaning and use of each item, highlighting similarities and
distinctions among neighbouring terms and expanding learners'
lexical range. The book is designed primarily for English-speaking
learners, and the selection of groups and items and the overall
treatment adopted reflects the author's extensive experience in
teaching Japanese to English speakers. Japanese forms and examples
appear in both romanisation and Japanese orthography, and the
bilingual indexes allow readers to locate synonyms quickly and
easily.
In this extraordinary new work, Dr. Backhouse undertakes a semantic
study of taste terms in modern spoken Japanese. Through an
investigation of the range of vocabulary available for the
description of taste qualities, and their interrelationship in
terms of meaning, Dr. Backhouse presents a sensitive elucidation of
the structure of Japanese taste terms, which has significant
implications for anthropological linguistics. He explores important
semantic issues, such as the relationship between evaluative and
descriptive meaning, the intralinguistic mechanisms at work in
metaphor, and draws illuminating connections between the lexical
field of color and that of taste.
In this extraordinary new work, Dr. Backhouse undertakes a semantic
study of taste terms in modern spoken Japanese. Through an
investigation of the range of vocabulary available for the
description of taste qualities, and their interrelationship in
terms of meaning, Dr. Backhouse presents a sensitive elucidation of
the structure of Japanese taste terms, which has significant
implications for anthropological linguistics. He explores important
semantic issues, such as the relationship between evaluative and
descriptive meaning, the intralinguistic mechanisms at work in
metaphor, and draws illuminating connections between the lexical
field of color and that of taste.
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