Conceptualizing humans as animals in English verb particle constructions

Author/s Klaus-Uwe Panther Nanjing Normal University, China, and University of Hamburg, Germany Linda L. Thornburg Nanjing Normal University, China   ABSTRACT Verb particle constructions with animal names used as verbs (‘VPrt critter constructions’), such as horse around, clam up, and ra...

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Main Author: lvalue lvalue
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitat Jaume I. Department of English Studies 2019-01-01
Series:Language Value
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.e-revistes.uji.es/index.php/languagevalue/article/view/4757
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spelling doaj-8ebe23296d104d5dbb73c37b64ca5c542021-02-12T13:18:09ZengUniversitat Jaume I. Department of English StudiesLanguage Value1989-71032019-01-0110.6035/LanguageV.2012.4.4Conceptualizing humans as animals in English verb particle constructionslvalue lvalue Author/s Klaus-Uwe Panther Nanjing Normal University, China, and University of Hamburg, Germany Linda L. Thornburg Nanjing Normal University, China   ABSTRACT Verb particle constructions with animal names used as verbs (‘VPrt critter constructions’), such as horse around, clam up, and rat out, are interesting because of their (i) grammatical structure, (ii) pragmatic function, (iii) conceptual content, and (iv) the cultural knowledge they reflect. This chapter focuses on the latter two aspects of critter constructions. More specifically, we assume that an adequate analysis of critter constructions requires folk or cultural models of the animals in question, spatial schemas for the particle, metaphorical mappings and metonymic inferences, and aspectual categories in the sense of Vendler (1957). We place our findings in the larger context of the status of cultural and cognitive models in general. Such models (including animal folk models) are often outdated and reflect centuries-old beliefs that have left their traces in lexico-grammatical structure, in this case, critter constructions. http://www.e-revistes.uji.es/index.php/languagevalue/article/view/4757aspectcritter constructioncultural modelmetaphormetonymynoun-verb conversion
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author lvalue lvalue
spellingShingle lvalue lvalue
Conceptualizing humans as animals in English verb particle constructions
Language Value
aspect
critter construction
cultural model
metaphor
metonymy
noun-verb conversion
author_facet lvalue lvalue
author_sort lvalue lvalue
title Conceptualizing humans as animals in English verb particle constructions
title_short Conceptualizing humans as animals in English verb particle constructions
title_full Conceptualizing humans as animals in English verb particle constructions
title_fullStr Conceptualizing humans as animals in English verb particle constructions
title_full_unstemmed Conceptualizing humans as animals in English verb particle constructions
title_sort conceptualizing humans as animals in english verb particle constructions
publisher Universitat Jaume I. Department of English Studies
series Language Value
issn 1989-7103
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Author/s Klaus-Uwe Panther Nanjing Normal University, China, and University of Hamburg, Germany Linda L. Thornburg Nanjing Normal University, China   ABSTRACT Verb particle constructions with animal names used as verbs (‘VPrt critter constructions’), such as horse around, clam up, and rat out, are interesting because of their (i) grammatical structure, (ii) pragmatic function, (iii) conceptual content, and (iv) the cultural knowledge they reflect. This chapter focuses on the latter two aspects of critter constructions. More specifically, we assume that an adequate analysis of critter constructions requires folk or cultural models of the animals in question, spatial schemas for the particle, metaphorical mappings and metonymic inferences, and aspectual categories in the sense of Vendler (1957). We place our findings in the larger context of the status of cultural and cognitive models in general. Such models (including animal folk models) are often outdated and reflect centuries-old beliefs that have left their traces in lexico-grammatical structure, in this case, critter constructions.
topic aspect
critter construction
cultural model
metaphor
metonymy
noun-verb conversion
url http://www.e-revistes.uji.es/index.php/languagevalue/article/view/4757
work_keys_str_mv AT lvaluelvalue conceptualizinghumansasanimalsinenglishverbparticleconstructions
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