219-7677
10
7500817
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Marketing Department / Karin Plijnaar, Pieter Lamers
onix@benjamins.nl
201805240858
ONIX title feed
eng
01
EUR
894018304
03
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JB
John Benjamins Publishing Company
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JB code
HCP 60 Eb
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9789027264381
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10.1075/hcp.60
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2018000010
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HCP
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1387-6724
Human Cognitive Processing
60
01
Conceptual Metonymy
Methodological, theoretical, and descriptive issues
01
hcp.60
01
https://benjamins.com
02
https://benjamins.com/catalog/hcp.60
1
B01
Olga Blanco-Carrión
Blanco-Carrión, Olga
Olga
Blanco-Carrión
University of Córdoba
2
B01
Antonio Barcelona
Barcelona, Antonio
Antonio
Barcelona
University of Córdoba
3
B01
Rossella Pannain
Pannain, Rossella
Rossella
Pannain
University of Naples L'Orientale
01
eng
335
ix
325
LAN016000
v.2006
CFG
2
24
JB Subject Scheme
LIN.COGN
Cognition and language
24
JB Subject Scheme
LIN.SEMAN
Semantics
24
JB Subject Scheme
LIN.THEOR
Theoretical linguistics
06
01
The volume addresses a number of closely connected methodological, descriptive, and theoretical issues in the study of metonymy, and includes a series of case studies broadening our knowledge of the functioning of metonymy. As regards the methodological and descriptive issues, the book exhibits a unique feature in metonymy literature: the discussion of the structure of a detailed, web-based metonymy database (especially its entry model), and the descriptive criteria to be applied in its completion. The theoretical discussion contributes important challenging insights on several metonymy-related topics such as contingency, source prominence, “complex target”, source-target contrast / asymmetry, conceptual integration, hierarchies, triggers, de-personalization and de-roling, and many others. The case studies deal with the role of metonymy in morphology, monoclausal if only constructions, emotional categories, and iconicity in English and other languages, including one sign language. Beside cognitive linguists, especially metonymy researchers, the book should appeal to researchers in A.I., sign language, rhetoric, lexicography, and communication.
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ix
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Miscellaneous
1
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Acknowledgments
10
01
JB code
hcp.60.int
1
24
24
Chapter
2
01
Introduction
The complex task of studying metonymy
1
A01
Antonio Barcelona
Barcelona, Antonio
Antonio
Barcelona
Universidad de Córdoba
2
A01
Olga Blanco-Carrión
Blanco-Carrión, Olga
Olga
Blanco-Carrión
Universidad de Córdoba
3
A01
Rossella Pannain
Pannain, Rossella
Rossella
Pannain
University of Naples "L'Orientale"
10
01
JB code
hcp.60.p1
26
93
68
Section header
3
01
Part 1. General issues in the description of metonymy: Issues in the design and implementation of a metonymy database
10
01
JB code
hcp.60.01bar
27
54
28
Chapter
4
01
Chapter 1. General description of the metonymy database in the Córdoba project, with particular attention to the issues of hierarchy, prototypicality, and taxonomic domains
1
A01
Antonio Barcelona
Barcelona, Antonio
Antonio
Barcelona
Universidad de Córdoba
20
entry model
20
prototypical metonymy
20
purely schematic metonymy
20
taxonomic domains with source or target role
20
taxonomic vs. meronymic hierarchies
20
typical metonymy.
01
This chapter presents part of the results of our project on metonymy, one of the aims of which is to compile a detailed database of metonymy. The database entry model is first briefly described, but the chapter focuses on the discussion of three issues addressed by four of the database entry fields. The first issue is the hierarchical level at which the metonymy under analysis should be located (fields 2 and 10). The second issue (Field 3) is the metonymy’s degree of prototypicality. The third issue, covered by Field 4, is the type of “taxonomic” domain with source or target role, e.g. “vehicles” and “drivers” in the example of <sc>object used for user</sc>
<x> </x>
<i>The buses are on strike</i>.
10
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20
Chapter
5
01
Chapter 2. Conventionality and linguistic domain(s) involved in the characterization of metonymies (for the creation of a detailed typology of metonymy)
1
A01
Olga Blanco-Carrión
Blanco-Carrión, Olga
Olga
Blanco-Carrión
Universidad de Córdoba
20
database entry model
20
descriptive criteria
20
form
20
function
20
grammatical process
20
grammatical rank
01
This is the second of three chapters devoted to the presentation of a set of criteria included in a database resulting from a project on the characterization of conceptual metonymy. It discusses Fields 5 and 7 of the database entry model, concerning conventionality, either conceptual or conceptual and linguistic, and the linguistic levels where metonymies operate (grammatical rank, meaning, form, grammatical process, and function).
10
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Chapter
6
01
Chapter 3. Analysis of metonymic triggers, metonymic chaining, and patterns of interaction with metaphor and with other metonymies as part of the metonymy database in the Córdoba project
1
A01
Isabel Hernández-Gomariz
Hernández-Gomariz, Isabel
Isabel
Hernández-Gomariz
20
metonymic chaining
20
metonymic triggers
20
patterns of interaction
01
This chapter offers a continuation of the chapters presented by Antonio Barcelona and Olga Blanco-Carrión in this same volume. Consequently, it deals with part of the results of the project FFI2012–36523, focused on the development of a detailed database on metonymy. The present chapter discusses the issues addressed in the remaining fields of the database entry model, namely Fields 8, 9 and 11. First, the chapter addresses the identification of the triggers leading to the operation – or blockage – of the metonymy (Field 8). The subsequent section analyzes the cases of metonymic chaining (Field 9), as proposed in Barcelona (2005). Finally, it studies the patterns of interaction that the metonymy may have with metaphors and/or other metonymies (Field 11).
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7
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Part 2. Discussion of some general properties of metonymy
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JB code
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120
24
Chapter
8
01
Chapter 4. Some contrast effects in metonymy
1
A01
John Barnden
Barnden, John
John
Barnden
University of Birmingham, UK
20
de-personalization
20
evaluative effects
20
highlighting
20
irony
20
metaphor
20
transferred epithets
01
This chapter analyses important, variegated ways in which contrast arises in metonymy. It explores, for instance, the negative evaluation of the target achieved in <i>de-roling</i>, where the source chosen is a target feature that is largely irrelevant to the target’s role in a described situation, therein contrasting with other target features that would have been more appropriate. This form of contrast, amongst others, can generate irony, so that the chapter elucidates some of the complex connections between metonymy and irony. It also explores the multiple roles of contrast in transferred epithets, especially as transferred epithets can be simultaneously metonymic and metaphorical. Finally, the chapter makes contrast-related suggestions regarding the metonymy database described by Barcelona and colleagues in other chapters.
10
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JB code
hcp.60.05pan
121
160
40
Chapter
9
01
Chapter 5. What kind of reasoning mode is metonymy?
1
A01
Klaus-Uwe Panther
Panther, Klaus-Uwe
Klaus-Uwe
Panther
University of Hamburg
2
A01
Linda L. Thornburg
Thornburg, Linda L.
Linda L.
Thornburg
Independent Scholar
20
abduction
20
conceptual frame
20
encyclopedic knowledge
20
entailment
20
implicature
01
In this chapter we present new arguments for a conception of metonymy as a <i>contingent</i>, i.e. defeasible, inferential relation between a source and a target sense within the same conceptual frame. Some scholars have raised objections against our approach to metonymy, claiming that there exist entailment-based metonymies. We demonstrate that the “counterexamples” in support of this thesis are in fact not entailments but cancelable inferences based on encyclopedic knowledge. We develop an account of metonymy inspired by the Peircean concept of abduction, a mode of reasoning that is pervasive in both scientific and everyday inferencing. Finally, we propose a distinction between default and incongruence-based metonymies and point out some parallelisms between metonymies and Gricean conversational implicatures.
10
01
JB code
hcp.60.06rad
161
182
22
Chapter
10
01
Chapter 6. <i>Molly married money</i>
Reflections on conceptual metonymy
1
A01
Günter Radden
Radden, Günter
Günter
Radden
Universität Hamburg
20
association
20
conceptual integration
20
conceptual shift
20
metonymic relation
20
metonymic source
20
metonymic target
01
This chapter is concerned with the conceptual basis of metonymy. Particular attention is devoted to properties that are considered crucial to conceptual metonymy. The <i>metonymic source</i> has received little attention. However, it plays an important role as an element of the target and is given due attention. The notion of <i>association</i> is applied to metonymic interconnections, inference, and strength of association. A central element of metonymy is the notion of <i>relation</i>: However, neither contiguity nor indexicality adequately covers the range of metonymic relations. The paper argues that two more properties are pertinent to conceptual metonymy: a <i>metonymic shift</i> from a source concept to a complex metonymic target, and the <i>conceptual</i>
<x> </x>
<i>integration</i> of source and target and its resulting emergent meanings.
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JB code
hcp.60.p3
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309
125
Section header
11
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Part 3. Ubiquity of metonymy in languages
10
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JB code
hcp.60.07bie
185
204
20
Chapter
12
01
Chapter 7. How metonymy motivates constructions
The case of monoclausal <i>if-only P</i> constructions in English
1
A01
Bogusław Bierwiaczonek
Bierwiaczonek, Bogusław
Bogusław
Bierwiaczonek
University of Czestochowa
20
conditional sentence
20
construction
20
constructional metonymy
20
epistemic stance
20
if-only construction
20
illocutionary force
01
This chapter shows how constructional metonymy, whereby a part Y of a grammatical construction X is used to access the whole construction X, leads to the emergence of new grammatical constructions. Such metonymically motivated constructions are called dependent constructions, as opposed to the autonomous constructions they originally targeted. The construction I consider in detail is the monoclausal <i>if-only P</i> construction. I attempt to demonstrate that, contrary to Dancygier and Sweetser’s (2005), there is no single <i>if-only P</i> construction but, rather, a network of at least four <i>if-only P</i> constructions, which differ in their time reference, epistemic stance and illocutionary force. My proposal shows that the emergence of such dependent constructions is usually motivated by the familiar <sc>part-for-whole</sc> metonymy.
10
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JB code
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32
Chapter
13
01
Chapter 8. The role of metonymy in the constructionist approach to the conceptualization of emotions
1
A01
Benedikt Perak
Perak, Benedikt
Benedikt
Perak
University of Rijeka
20
cognitive hierarchy
20
emergent constructionist model
20
fear
20
sensory-motor metonymies
01
Based on the corpus analysis of the conceptualization of <i>strah</i> ‘fear’ in Croatian, this chapter demonstrates that the conceptual structure of emotions emerges from syntactic and semantic organization activated by sensory-motor, ontological, spatial, thematic and agentive linguistic constructions. The proposed emergent constructionist model argues for a hierarchal organization of the metonymic and metaphorical conceptualizations. In terms of cognitive hierarchy, the model shows that sensory-motor metonymic profiling is the most basic, distinctive and, therefore, the most informative mechanism of conceptualizing emotions because it conveys knowledge about the affective state, enabling simulations of the quality of a specific emotion category, while additional metaphorical mechanisms build on metonymic conceptualizations using other general cognitive abilities expressing knowledge about objects, properties, relations and events.
10
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JB code
hcp.60.09pan
237
260
24
Chapter
14
01
Chapter 9. The mouth of the speaker
Italian metonymies of Linguistic Action
1
A01
Rossella Pannain
Pannain, Rossella
Rossella
Pannain
University of Naples "L'Orientale"
20
body parts
20
compounding
20
corpora
20
evaluative metaphor
20
morphology
20
scalar dimensions
01
Among body parts, speech organs are a default source of metonymic mapping towards the domain of <sc>linguistic action</sc>. In Italian this conceptual metonymy is responsible for several representations of types of <sc>speaker</sc> and <sc>linguistic behavior</sc>, and may be encoded in nominal modification and in word formation by compounding or evaluative suffixation. Within these construction schemas, the semantics of the lexical bases and of the additional lexical/morphological elements interact in conjuring the metonymic (-metaphoric) denotations of the four Italian linguistic items analyzed in the chapter. Their semantics involves value judgment, which partly depends on the target domain, and the contribution of scalar dimensional notions such as <sc>size</sc> and <sc>quantity.</sc> The data are primarily drawn from two corpora of contemporary written Italian.
10
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JB code
hcp.60.10por
261
286
26
Chapter
15
01
Chapter 10. Are <i>smartphone face</i> and <i>Googleheads</i> a real or a fake phenomenon?
The current role of metonymy in semantic exocentricity
1
A01
Carmen Portero-Muñoz
Portero-Muñoz, Carmen
Carmen
Portero-Muñoz
Universidad de Córdoba
20
bahuvrihi compounds
20
body-part nouns
20
exocentricity
20
metonymy
20
possessive compounds
20
productivity
01
This paper seeks to provide evidence of the pervasiveness of metonymy as a resource triggering the creation of examples of a remnant category in morphological research, so-called ‘exocentric’ compounds. Exocentricity is not a homogeneous phenomenon in English, where it is typically represented by <i>bahuvrihi</i> compounds, which refer to an entity via a salient property on the basis of the metonymy <sc>part for whole</sc>. This research starts up with the collection of a corpus of over 300 English compounds with a body-part noun as the right component. As a result of the search, some regions of productivity will be shown to exist, not only by the creation of new instantiations of existing patterns but also by the emergence of new subtypes.
10
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JB code
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310
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Chapter
16
01
Chapter 11. Metonymy and the dynamics of conceptual operations in Spanish Sign Language
1
A01
Ana-Laura Rodríguez-Redondo
Rodríguez-Redondo, Ana-Laura
Ana-Laura
Rodríguez-Redondo
Universidad Complutense de Madrid
20
conceptualization
20
iconicity
20
metonymic chains
01
This paper aims at presenting a first approach to the multilevel dynamics of metonymy in Spanish Sign Language (LSE) within Barcelona’s approach to cognitive metonymy (2000, 2002, 2005, 2011, 2015). At the same time, within this framework, we see the compatibility of the current approaches to metonymy and iconicity in signed languages (Taub 2001; Wilcox 2003, 2004). We propose a metonymic approach to the conceptualization of manual articulators and develop a three level analysis (Barcelona 2005) of three LSE examples. The examples are extracted from a corpus of cooking recipes recorded by Spanish native signers. The first results show the complex multilevel metonymic chained nature of signed meaning-form construals in LSE to be confirmed by further studies at each level.
10
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JB code
hcp.60.index
311
313
3
Miscellaneous
17
01
Metonymy index
10
01
JB code
hcp.60.ni
315
319
5
Miscellaneous
18
01
Name index
10
01
JB code
hcp.60.si
321
325
5
Miscellaneous
19
01
Subject index
02
JBENJAMINS
John Benjamins Publishing Company
01
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Amsterdam/Philadelphia
NL
04
20180517
2018
John Benjamins B.V.
02
WORLD
13
15
9789027200389
01
JB
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John Benjamins e-Platform
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jbe-platform.com
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R
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GBP
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gen
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149.00
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S
921018303
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JB
John Benjamins Publishing Company
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JB code
HCP 60 Hb
15
9789027200389
13
2017057751
BB
01
HCP
02
1387-6724
Human Cognitive Processing
60
01
Conceptual Metonymy
Methodological, theoretical, and descriptive issues
01
hcp.60
01
https://benjamins.com
02
https://benjamins.com/catalog/hcp.60
1
B01
Olga Blanco-Carrión
Blanco-Carrión, Olga
Olga
Blanco-Carrión
University of Córdoba
2
B01
Antonio Barcelona
Barcelona, Antonio
Antonio
Barcelona
University of Córdoba
3
B01
Rossella Pannain
Pannain, Rossella
Rossella
Pannain
University of Naples L'Orientale
01
eng
335
ix
325
LAN016000
v.2006
CFG
2
24
JB Subject Scheme
LIN.COGN
Cognition and language
24
JB Subject Scheme
LIN.SEMAN
Semantics
24
JB Subject Scheme
LIN.THEOR
Theoretical linguistics
06
01
The volume addresses a number of closely connected methodological, descriptive, and theoretical issues in the study of metonymy, and includes a series of case studies broadening our knowledge of the functioning of metonymy. As regards the methodological and descriptive issues, the book exhibits a unique feature in metonymy literature: the discussion of the structure of a detailed, web-based metonymy database (especially its entry model), and the descriptive criteria to be applied in its completion. The theoretical discussion contributes important challenging insights on several metonymy-related topics such as contingency, source prominence, “complex target”, source-target contrast / asymmetry, conceptual integration, hierarchies, triggers, de-personalization and de-roling, and many others. The case studies deal with the role of metonymy in morphology, monoclausal if only constructions, emotional categories, and iconicity in English and other languages, including one sign language. Beside cognitive linguists, especially metonymy researchers, the book should appeal to researchers in A.I., sign language, rhetoric, lexicography, and communication.
04
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ix
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Miscellaneous
1
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Acknowledgments
10
01
JB code
hcp.60.int
1
24
24
Chapter
2
01
Introduction
The complex task of studying metonymy
1
A01
Antonio Barcelona
Barcelona, Antonio
Antonio
Barcelona
Universidad de Córdoba
2
A01
Olga Blanco-Carrión
Blanco-Carrión, Olga
Olga
Blanco-Carrión
Universidad de Córdoba
3
A01
Rossella Pannain
Pannain, Rossella
Rossella
Pannain
University of Naples "L'Orientale"
10
01
JB code
hcp.60.p1
26
93
68
Section header
3
01
Part 1. General issues in the description of metonymy: Issues in the design and implementation of a metonymy database
10
01
JB code
hcp.60.01bar
27
54
28
Chapter
4
01
Chapter 1. General description of the metonymy database in the Córdoba project, with particular attention to the issues of hierarchy, prototypicality, and taxonomic domains
1
A01
Antonio Barcelona
Barcelona, Antonio
Antonio
Barcelona
Universidad de Córdoba
20
entry model
20
prototypical metonymy
20
purely schematic metonymy
20
taxonomic domains with source or target role
20
taxonomic vs. meronymic hierarchies
20
typical metonymy.
01
This chapter presents part of the results of our project on metonymy, one of the aims of which is to compile a detailed database of metonymy. The database entry model is first briefly described, but the chapter focuses on the discussion of three issues addressed by four of the database entry fields. The first issue is the hierarchical level at which the metonymy under analysis should be located (fields 2 and 10). The second issue (Field 3) is the metonymy’s degree of prototypicality. The third issue, covered by Field 4, is the type of “taxonomic” domain with source or target role, e.g. “vehicles” and “drivers” in the example of <sc>object used for user</sc>
<x> </x>
<i>The buses are on strike</i>.
10
01
JB code
hcp.60.02bla
55
74
20
Chapter
5
01
Chapter 2. Conventionality and linguistic domain(s) involved in the characterization of metonymies (for the creation of a detailed typology of metonymy)
1
A01
Olga Blanco-Carrión
Blanco-Carrión, Olga
Olga
Blanco-Carrión
Universidad de Córdoba
20
database entry model
20
descriptive criteria
20
form
20
function
20
grammatical process
20
grammatical rank
01
This is the second of three chapters devoted to the presentation of a set of criteria included in a database resulting from a project on the characterization of conceptual metonymy. It discusses Fields 5 and 7 of the database entry model, concerning conventionality, either conceptual or conceptual and linguistic, and the linguistic levels where metonymies operate (grammatical rank, meaning, form, grammatical process, and function).
10
01
JB code
hcp.60.03her
75
94
20
Chapter
6
01
Chapter 3. Analysis of metonymic triggers, metonymic chaining, and patterns of interaction with metaphor and with other metonymies as part of the metonymy database in the Córdoba project
1
A01
Isabel Hernández-Gomariz
Hernández-Gomariz, Isabel
Isabel
Hernández-Gomariz
20
metonymic chaining
20
metonymic triggers
20
patterns of interaction
01
This chapter offers a continuation of the chapters presented by Antonio Barcelona and Olga Blanco-Carrión in this same volume. Consequently, it deals with part of the results of the project FFI2012–36523, focused on the development of a detailed database on metonymy. The present chapter discusses the issues addressed in the remaining fields of the database entry model, namely Fields 8, 9 and 11. First, the chapter addresses the identification of the triggers leading to the operation – or blockage – of the metonymy (Field 8). The subsequent section analyzes the cases of metonymic chaining (Field 9), as proposed in Barcelona (2005). Finally, it studies the patterns of interaction that the metonymy may have with metaphors and/or other metonymies (Field 11).
10
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JB code
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182
86
Section header
7
01
Part 2. Discussion of some general properties of metonymy
10
01
JB code
hcp.60.04bar
97
120
24
Chapter
8
01
Chapter 4. Some contrast effects in metonymy
1
A01
John Barnden
Barnden, John
John
Barnden
University of Birmingham, UK
20
de-personalization
20
evaluative effects
20
highlighting
20
irony
20
metaphor
20
transferred epithets
01
This chapter analyses important, variegated ways in which contrast arises in metonymy. It explores, for instance, the negative evaluation of the target achieved in <i>de-roling</i>, where the source chosen is a target feature that is largely irrelevant to the target’s role in a described situation, therein contrasting with other target features that would have been more appropriate. This form of contrast, amongst others, can generate irony, so that the chapter elucidates some of the complex connections between metonymy and irony. It also explores the multiple roles of contrast in transferred epithets, especially as transferred epithets can be simultaneously metonymic and metaphorical. Finally, the chapter makes contrast-related suggestions regarding the metonymy database described by Barcelona and colleagues in other chapters.
10
01
JB code
hcp.60.05pan
121
160
40
Chapter
9
01
Chapter 5. What kind of reasoning mode is metonymy?
1
A01
Klaus-Uwe Panther
Panther, Klaus-Uwe
Klaus-Uwe
Panther
University of Hamburg
2
A01
Linda L. Thornburg
Thornburg, Linda L.
Linda L.
Thornburg
Independent Scholar
20
abduction
20
conceptual frame
20
encyclopedic knowledge
20
entailment
20
implicature
01
In this chapter we present new arguments for a conception of metonymy as a <i>contingent</i>, i.e. defeasible, inferential relation between a source and a target sense within the same conceptual frame. Some scholars have raised objections against our approach to metonymy, claiming that there exist entailment-based metonymies. We demonstrate that the “counterexamples” in support of this thesis are in fact not entailments but cancelable inferences based on encyclopedic knowledge. We develop an account of metonymy inspired by the Peircean concept of abduction, a mode of reasoning that is pervasive in both scientific and everyday inferencing. Finally, we propose a distinction between default and incongruence-based metonymies and point out some parallelisms between metonymies and Gricean conversational implicatures.
10
01
JB code
hcp.60.06rad
161
182
22
Chapter
10
01
Chapter 6. <i>Molly married money</i>
Reflections on conceptual metonymy
1
A01
Günter Radden
Radden, Günter
Günter
Radden
Universität Hamburg
20
association
20
conceptual integration
20
conceptual shift
20
metonymic relation
20
metonymic source
20
metonymic target
01
This chapter is concerned with the conceptual basis of metonymy. Particular attention is devoted to properties that are considered crucial to conceptual metonymy. The <i>metonymic source</i> has received little attention. However, it plays an important role as an element of the target and is given due attention. The notion of <i>association</i> is applied to metonymic interconnections, inference, and strength of association. A central element of metonymy is the notion of <i>relation</i>: However, neither contiguity nor indexicality adequately covers the range of metonymic relations. The paper argues that two more properties are pertinent to conceptual metonymy: a <i>metonymic shift</i> from a source concept to a complex metonymic target, and the <i>conceptual</i>
<x> </x>
<i>integration</i> of source and target and its resulting emergent meanings.
10
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JB code
hcp.60.p3
185
309
125
Section header
11
01
Part 3. Ubiquity of metonymy in languages
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01
JB code
hcp.60.07bie
185
204
20
Chapter
12
01
Chapter 7. How metonymy motivates constructions
The case of monoclausal <i>if-only P</i> constructions in English
1
A01
Bogusław Bierwiaczonek
Bierwiaczonek, Bogusław
Bogusław
Bierwiaczonek
University of Czestochowa
20
conditional sentence
20
construction
20
constructional metonymy
20
epistemic stance
20
if-only construction
20
illocutionary force
01
This chapter shows how constructional metonymy, whereby a part Y of a grammatical construction X is used to access the whole construction X, leads to the emergence of new grammatical constructions. Such metonymically motivated constructions are called dependent constructions, as opposed to the autonomous constructions they originally targeted. The construction I consider in detail is the monoclausal <i>if-only P</i> construction. I attempt to demonstrate that, contrary to Dancygier and Sweetser’s (2005), there is no single <i>if-only P</i> construction but, rather, a network of at least four <i>if-only P</i> constructions, which differ in their time reference, epistemic stance and illocutionary force. My proposal shows that the emergence of such dependent constructions is usually motivated by the familiar <sc>part-for-whole</sc> metonymy.
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01
JB code
hcp.60.08per
205
236
32
Chapter
13
01
Chapter 8. The role of metonymy in the constructionist approach to the conceptualization of emotions
1
A01
Benedikt Perak
Perak, Benedikt
Benedikt
Perak
University of Rijeka
20
cognitive hierarchy
20
emergent constructionist model
20
fear
20
sensory-motor metonymies
01
Based on the corpus analysis of the conceptualization of <i>strah</i> ‘fear’ in Croatian, this chapter demonstrates that the conceptual structure of emotions emerges from syntactic and semantic organization activated by sensory-motor, ontological, spatial, thematic and agentive linguistic constructions. The proposed emergent constructionist model argues for a hierarchal organization of the metonymic and metaphorical conceptualizations. In terms of cognitive hierarchy, the model shows that sensory-motor metonymic profiling is the most basic, distinctive and, therefore, the most informative mechanism of conceptualizing emotions because it conveys knowledge about the affective state, enabling simulations of the quality of a specific emotion category, while additional metaphorical mechanisms build on metonymic conceptualizations using other general cognitive abilities expressing knowledge about objects, properties, relations and events.
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01
JB code
hcp.60.09pan
237
260
24
Chapter
14
01
Chapter 9. The mouth of the speaker
Italian metonymies of Linguistic Action
1
A01
Rossella Pannain
Pannain, Rossella
Rossella
Pannain
University of Naples "L'Orientale"
20
body parts
20
compounding
20
corpora
20
evaluative metaphor
20
morphology
20
scalar dimensions
01
Among body parts, speech organs are a default source of metonymic mapping towards the domain of <sc>linguistic action</sc>. In Italian this conceptual metonymy is responsible for several representations of types of <sc>speaker</sc> and <sc>linguistic behavior</sc>, and may be encoded in nominal modification and in word formation by compounding or evaluative suffixation. Within these construction schemas, the semantics of the lexical bases and of the additional lexical/morphological elements interact in conjuring the metonymic (-metaphoric) denotations of the four Italian linguistic items analyzed in the chapter. Their semantics involves value judgment, which partly depends on the target domain, and the contribution of scalar dimensional notions such as <sc>size</sc> and <sc>quantity.</sc> The data are primarily drawn from two corpora of contemporary written Italian.
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01
JB code
hcp.60.10por
261
286
26
Chapter
15
01
Chapter 10. Are <i>smartphone face</i> and <i>Googleheads</i> a real or a fake phenomenon?
The current role of metonymy in semantic exocentricity
1
A01
Carmen Portero-Muñoz
Portero-Muñoz, Carmen
Carmen
Portero-Muñoz
Universidad de Córdoba
20
bahuvrihi compounds
20
body-part nouns
20
exocentricity
20
metonymy
20
possessive compounds
20
productivity
01
This paper seeks to provide evidence of the pervasiveness of metonymy as a resource triggering the creation of examples of a remnant category in morphological research, so-called ‘exocentric’ compounds. Exocentricity is not a homogeneous phenomenon in English, where it is typically represented by <i>bahuvrihi</i> compounds, which refer to an entity via a salient property on the basis of the metonymy <sc>part for whole</sc>. This research starts up with the collection of a corpus of over 300 English compounds with a body-part noun as the right component. As a result of the search, some regions of productivity will be shown to exist, not only by the creation of new instantiations of existing patterns but also by the emergence of new subtypes.
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01
JB code
hcp.60.11rod
287
310
24
Chapter
16
01
Chapter 11. Metonymy and the dynamics of conceptual operations in Spanish Sign Language
1
A01
Ana-Laura Rodríguez-Redondo
Rodríguez-Redondo, Ana-Laura
Ana-Laura
Rodríguez-Redondo
Universidad Complutense de Madrid
20
conceptualization
20
iconicity
20
metonymic chains
01
This paper aims at presenting a first approach to the multilevel dynamics of metonymy in Spanish Sign Language (LSE) within Barcelona’s approach to cognitive metonymy (2000, 2002, 2005, 2011, 2015). At the same time, within this framework, we see the compatibility of the current approaches to metonymy and iconicity in signed languages (Taub 2001; Wilcox 2003, 2004). We propose a metonymic approach to the conceptualization of manual articulators and develop a three level analysis (Barcelona 2005) of three LSE examples. The examples are extracted from a corpus of cooking recipes recorded by Spanish native signers. The first results show the complex multilevel metonymic chained nature of signed meaning-form construals in LSE to be confirmed by further studies at each level.
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JB code
hcp.60.index
311
313
3
Miscellaneous
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Metonymy index
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JB code
hcp.60.ni
315
319
5
Miscellaneous
18
01
Name index
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01
JB code
hcp.60.si
321
325
5
Miscellaneous
19
01
Subject index
02
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