Putting order into literal and figurative uses of verbs: "Romper" as a case study

This paper argues in favor of the hypothesis that the so-called figurative and literal  meanings of verbs share a common core meaning that constitutes the semantic base of verbs across contexts. I argue for an underspecification model of the lexicon and take the Spanish change of state verb romper ‘b...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Alexandra Spalek
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Septentrio Academic Publishing 2012-11-01
Series:Borealis: An International Journal of Hispanic Linguistics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ub.uit.no/baser/septentrio/index.php/borealis/article/view/2341
id doaj-6d0bf05bdc714e86abac993ac490a7bc
record_format Article
spelling doaj-6d0bf05bdc714e86abac993ac490a7bc2020-11-25T00:49:12ZengSeptentrio Academic PublishingBorealis: An International Journal of Hispanic Linguistics1893-32112012-11-011214016710.7557/1.1.2.23412228Putting order into literal and figurative uses of verbs: "Romper" as a case studyAlexandra Spalek0Universitat Pompeu FabraThis paper argues in favor of the hypothesis that the so-called figurative and literal  meanings of verbs share a common core meaning that constitutes the semantic base of verbs across contexts. I argue for an underspecification model of the lexicon and take the Spanish change of state verb romper ‘break’ as a case study. It is shown that the meaning variation of romper-VPs is correlated with the semantics of the theme in two ways: 1) whether and how exactly the theme is affected by the change and 2) whether the theme has a simple or a complex mereological structure. I thus analyze romper in terms of a simple scalar change, for which the exact dimension of change depends on the properties of the theme argument. The study is taken as precursor for the analysis of lexical entailments of change of state verbs in composition and aims at showing that what has often been denominated metaphoric extensions or non-regular polysemy can be analyzed alike through an underspecification approach. The present paper represents a view of lexicon that goes against a trivial and static conception of lexical meaning.http://www.ub.uit.no/baser/septentrio/index.php/borealis/article/view/2341polysemychange-of-state verbsunderspecificationscalar change
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alexandra Spalek
spellingShingle Alexandra Spalek
Putting order into literal and figurative uses of verbs: "Romper" as a case study
Borealis: An International Journal of Hispanic Linguistics
polysemy
change-of-state verbs
underspecification
scalar change
author_facet Alexandra Spalek
author_sort Alexandra Spalek
title Putting order into literal and figurative uses of verbs: "Romper" as a case study
title_short Putting order into literal and figurative uses of verbs: "Romper" as a case study
title_full Putting order into literal and figurative uses of verbs: "Romper" as a case study
title_fullStr Putting order into literal and figurative uses of verbs: "Romper" as a case study
title_full_unstemmed Putting order into literal and figurative uses of verbs: "Romper" as a case study
title_sort putting order into literal and figurative uses of verbs: "romper" as a case study
publisher Septentrio Academic Publishing
series Borealis: An International Journal of Hispanic Linguistics
issn 1893-3211
publishDate 2012-11-01
description This paper argues in favor of the hypothesis that the so-called figurative and literal  meanings of verbs share a common core meaning that constitutes the semantic base of verbs across contexts. I argue for an underspecification model of the lexicon and take the Spanish change of state verb romper ‘break’ as a case study. It is shown that the meaning variation of romper-VPs is correlated with the semantics of the theme in two ways: 1) whether and how exactly the theme is affected by the change and 2) whether the theme has a simple or a complex mereological structure. I thus analyze romper in terms of a simple scalar change, for which the exact dimension of change depends on the properties of the theme argument. The study is taken as precursor for the analysis of lexical entailments of change of state verbs in composition and aims at showing that what has often been denominated metaphoric extensions or non-regular polysemy can be analyzed alike through an underspecification approach. The present paper represents a view of lexicon that goes against a trivial and static conception of lexical meaning.
topic polysemy
change-of-state verbs
underspecification
scalar change
url http://www.ub.uit.no/baser/septentrio/index.php/borealis/article/view/2341
work_keys_str_mv AT alexandraspalek puttingorderintoliteralandfigurativeusesofverbsromperasacasestudy
_version_ 1725252541048946688