02722cam a2200373 i 4500 18134177 20140930095236.0 140430t20142014ne a b 001 0 eng c 7 cbc orignew 1 ecip 20 y-gencatlg acquire 1 shelf copy Sel/ddw, 2014-07-21 OU xk04 2014-04-30 to Dewey xl04 2014-04-30 xn05 2014-07-29 1 copy rec'd., to CIP ver. xk02 2014-09-30, c. 1 to CALM 2013044623 9789027223968 (Hb : alk. paper) 9789027270658 (Eb) OU/DLC eng OU rda DLC pcc P299.S53 M66 2014 415 23 Moore, Kevin Ezra, author. The spatial language of time : metaphor, metonymym, and frames of reference / Kevin Ezra Moore, San José State University. Amsterdam ; Philadelphia : John Benjamins Publishing Company, [2014] ©2014 xxv, 340 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm text rdacontent unmediated rdamedia volume rdacarrier Human Cognitive Processing (HCP), 1387-6724 ; volume 42 Includes bibliographical references (pages 319-334) and indexes. Introduction: Talking about time as if it were space -- The deictic nature of Moving Ego and Ego-centered Moving Time expressions -- The experiential bases (grounding, motivation) of Moving Ego and Ego-centered Moving Time -- From earlier to later -- Frame of reference and alternate construals of ego-centered time -- A field-based frame of reference -- The psychological reality of sequence is relative position on a path -- Illustrating the field-based/ego-perspective contrast : the case of sequence is relative position in a stack -- Space-to-time metonymy -- The contrasting front/behind schemas of sequence is relative position on a path and Moving Ego -- The crosslinguistic pairing of in-front and behind with 'earlier' and 'later' -- When back is not the opposite of front : a temporal relative frame of reference in Wolof -- The Ego-opposed temporal metaphor and contexts of shared perspective -- Modes of construal of front and behind -- In search of primary metaphors of time -- Expressions of static temporal "location" -- Beyond metaphor and metonymy : mental spaces and conceptual integration -- Other-centered Moving Time and Wolof fekk 'become co-located with' -- Times as bounded regions -- Having and wasting Wolof counterparts of time -- Conclusions. Space and time in language. Grammar, Comparative and general Temporal constructions. Metaphor. Metonyms. OUCIP 2014-04-30