|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
This book offers a unique perspective on meaning in language,
broadening the scope of existing understanding of meaning by
introducing a comprehensive and cohesive account of meaning that
draws on a wide range of linguistic approaches. The volume seeks to
build up a complete picture of what meaning is, different types of
meaning, and different ways of structuring the same meaning across
myriad forms and varieties of language across such domains, such as
everyday speech, advertising, humour, and academic writing.
Supported by data from psycholinguistic and neurolinguistic
research, the book combines different approaches from scholarship
in semantics, including formalist, structuralist, cognitive,
functionalist, and semiotics to demonstrate the ways in which
meaning is expressed in words but also in word order and
intonation. The book argues for a revised conceptualisation of
meaning toward presenting a new perspective on semantics and its
wider study in language and linguistic research. This book will
appeal to scholars interested in meaning in language in such fields
as linguistics, semantics, and semiotics. The Open Access version
of this book, available at http://www.taylorfrancis.com has been
made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non
Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license.
The order and behaviour of the premodifier (an adjective, or other
modifying word that appears before a noun) has long been a puzzle
to syntacticians and semanticists. Why can we say 'the actual red
ball', but not 'the red actual ball'? And why, conversely, do some
other premodifiers have free variation in sentences; for example we
can say both 'German and English speakers' and 'English and German
speakers'? Why do some premodifiers change the meaning of a phrase
in some contexts; for example 'young man', can mean 'boyfriend',
rather than 'man who is young'? Drawing on a corpus of over 4,000
examples of English premodifiers from a range of genres such as
advertising, fiction and scientific texts, and across several
varieties of English, this book synthesises research into
premodifiers and provides a new explanation of their behaviour,
order and use.
The order and behaviour of the premodifier (an adjective, or other
modifying word that appears before a noun) has long been a puzzle
to syntacticians and semanticists. Why can we say 'the actual red
ball', but not 'the red actual ball'? And why, conversely, do some
other premodifiers have free variation in sentences; for example we
can say both 'German and English speakers' and 'English and German
speakers'? Why do some premodifiers change the meaning of a phrase
in some contexts; for example 'young man', can mean 'boyfriend',
rather than 'man who is young'? Drawing on a corpus of over 4,000
examples of English premodifiers from a range of genres such as
advertising, fiction and scientific texts, and across several
varieties of English, this book synthesises research into
premodifiers and provides a new explanation of their behaviour,
order and use.
|
You may like...
Hypnotic
Ben Affleck, Alice Braga, …
DVD
R133
Discovery Miles 1 330
|