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Book Cover
E-book
Author Langacker, Ronald W

Title Concept, Image, and Symbol : the Cognitive Basis of Grammar
Published Berlin : De Gruyter, 1990

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Description 1 online resource (408 pages)
Series Cognitive Linguistics Research [CLR] ; v. 1
Cognitive Linguistics Research CLR
Contents Preface; 1. Introduction; 1. Linguistic semantics; 2. Dimensions of imagery; 3. Grammar as image; 4. Grammatical organization; 5. Grammatical classes; 6. Grammatical constructions; 7. Conclusion; 2. Inside and outside in Cora; 1. Theoretical preliminaries; 2. Enclosure; 3. Topographical domain; 4. Accessibility; 5. Scope; 6. Implications; 3. Nouns and verbs; 1. Issues; 2. Basic concepts; 3. Bounding; 4. Interconnection; 5. Count vs. mass nouns; 6. Relations; 7. Processes; 8. Motivation; 9. Perfective vs. imperfective processes; 10. Progressives; 11. Abstract nouns; 12. Conclusion
4. The English passive 1. Grammar and analyzability; 2. Descriptive framework; 3. The passive construction; 5. Abstract motion; 1. Basic concepts and assumptions; 2. The characterization of verbs; 3. Objective motion; 4. Subjective motion; 5. Avenues of semantic extension; 6. Grammatical valence; 1. Canonical instances; 2. Non-canonical instances; 3. Further departures from the canon; 4. Scope and morphological layering; 7. Active zones; 1. The phenomenon; 2. Analysis; 3. Grammatical implications; 8. The Yuman auxiliary; 9. Transitivity, case, and grammatical relations
1. The conception of actions and events 2. Unmarked linguistic coding; 3. Marked coding; 4. Case; 5. Causative constructions; 10. A usage-based model; 1. Two conceptions of generality; 2. The network conception; 3. General applicability; 4. Distribution; 5. Conclusion; 11. Autonomy and agreement; 1. The autonomy issue; 2. The symbolic alternative; 3. Grammatical markings; 4. Agreement; 5. Conclusion; 12. Subjectification; 1. Perspective; 2. Grounding; 3. The nature of subjectification; 4. A spatial example; 5. The future sense of 'go'; 6. Modals; 7. Possession and perfect aspect; 8. Conclusion
Summary This research monograph develops and illustrates an innovative theory of linguistic structure, called ""cognitive grammar"", and applies it to representative phenomena in English and other languages. Cognitive grammar views language as an intergral fact of cognition and claims that grammatical structure cannot be understood or revealingly described independently of semantic considerations. It argues that grammar forms a continuum with the lexicon and is reducible to symbolic relationships (i.e. form-meaning pairings), and consequently that all valid grammatical constructs have some kind of con
Subject Cognitive grammar.
Grammar, Comparative and general.
Cognitive grammar
Grammar, Comparative and general
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9783110857733
3110857731