Table of contents
Towards a ‘full pedigree’ of the ‘Sapir-Whorf hypothesis’: From Locke to Lucy1
How relativistic are Humboldt’s “Weltansichten”?25
When is ‘linguistic relativity’ Whorf’s linguistic relativity?45
Linguistic relativity and translation69
Humboldt, Whorf and the roots of ecolinguistics89
Loci of diversity and convergence in thought and language101
From the Jurassic dark: Linguistic relativity as evolutionary necessity159
Neuro-cognitive structure in the interplay of language and thought173
Language and thought: Collective tools for individual use197
Ontological classifiers as polycentric categories, as seen in Shona class 3 nouns225
Linguistic relativity and the plasticity of categorization: Universalism in a New Key249
Linguistic relativity as a function of ideological deixis295
Why we subject incorporate (in English): a post-Whorfian view319
Metalinguistic awareness in linguistic relativity: Cultural and subcultural practices across Chinese dialect communities345
Subject Index365
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