ABRELATAS AND SCARECROW NOUNS: EXOCENTRIC VERB-NOUN COMPOUNDS. AS ILLUSTRATIONS OF BASIC PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE GRAMMAR

Spanish and English have exocentric verb+obiect = subiect/instrument compounds, such as abrelatas (opens-cans) 'can-opener' and scarecrow. They share a general constructional pattem, consist of "clumps" or subfamilies of forms, and have a negative or jocular tendency. They differ...

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Main Author: David Tuggy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad de Murcia 2003-12-01
Series:International Journal of English Studies (IJES)
Subjects:
Online Access:http://revistas.um.es/ijes/article/view/48321
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spelling doaj-db07402403d84097b29208e13962396a2020-11-25T01:28:25ZengUniversidad de MurciaInternational Journal of English Studies (IJES)1578-70442003-12-0132256210.6018/ijes.3.2.48321ABRELATAS AND SCARECROW NOUNS: EXOCENTRIC VERB-NOUN COMPOUNDS. AS ILLUSTRATIONS OF BASIC PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE GRAMMARDavid TuggySpanish and English have exocentric verb+obiect = subiect/instrument compounds, such as abrelatas (opens-cans) 'can-opener' and scarecrow. They share a general constructional pattem, consist of "clumps" or subfamilies of forms, and have a negative or jocular tendency. They differ in their individual compounds, subfamilies and constructional prototypes. The Spanish construction is a widely productive, major mechanism for naming instruments; the English construction names subjects, and is a minor pattem currently productive only in one subfamily.
 Exceptional forms in both languages approach each other's prototype. In both languages the
 category fits into wider families or categories of constructions, but those wider families are
 different.
 These patterns illuminate basic tenets of Cognitive grammar, including: (1) usage-based
 grammar. (2) Multiple pattems. (3) Lower-leve1 outranking higher-leve1 pattems. (4) Functional motivation, but ( 5 ) persistence of pattems despite absence of functionality. These considerations underline (6) the insufficiency of models positing innate, absolute, few and simple rules.http://revistas.um.es/ijes/article/view/48321SpanishEnglishexocentric compoundsCognitive grammarfunctional motivation.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David Tuggy
spellingShingle David Tuggy
ABRELATAS AND SCARECROW NOUNS: EXOCENTRIC VERB-NOUN COMPOUNDS. AS ILLUSTRATIONS OF BASIC PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE GRAMMAR
International Journal of English Studies (IJES)
Spanish
English
exocentric compounds
Cognitive grammar
functional motivation.
author_facet David Tuggy
author_sort David Tuggy
title ABRELATAS AND SCARECROW NOUNS: EXOCENTRIC VERB-NOUN COMPOUNDS. AS ILLUSTRATIONS OF BASIC PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE GRAMMAR
title_short ABRELATAS AND SCARECROW NOUNS: EXOCENTRIC VERB-NOUN COMPOUNDS. AS ILLUSTRATIONS OF BASIC PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE GRAMMAR
title_full ABRELATAS AND SCARECROW NOUNS: EXOCENTRIC VERB-NOUN COMPOUNDS. AS ILLUSTRATIONS OF BASIC PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE GRAMMAR
title_fullStr ABRELATAS AND SCARECROW NOUNS: EXOCENTRIC VERB-NOUN COMPOUNDS. AS ILLUSTRATIONS OF BASIC PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE GRAMMAR
title_full_unstemmed ABRELATAS AND SCARECROW NOUNS: EXOCENTRIC VERB-NOUN COMPOUNDS. AS ILLUSTRATIONS OF BASIC PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE GRAMMAR
title_sort abrelatas and scarecrow nouns: exocentric verb-noun compounds. as illustrations of basic principles of cognitive grammar
publisher Universidad de Murcia
series International Journal of English Studies (IJES)
issn 1578-7044
publishDate 2003-12-01
description Spanish and English have exocentric verb+obiect = subiect/instrument compounds, such as abrelatas (opens-cans) 'can-opener' and scarecrow. They share a general constructional pattem, consist of "clumps" or subfamilies of forms, and have a negative or jocular tendency. They differ in their individual compounds, subfamilies and constructional prototypes. The Spanish construction is a widely productive, major mechanism for naming instruments; the English construction names subjects, and is a minor pattem currently productive only in one subfamily.
 Exceptional forms in both languages approach each other's prototype. In both languages the
 category fits into wider families or categories of constructions, but those wider families are
 different.
 These patterns illuminate basic tenets of Cognitive grammar, including: (1) usage-based
 grammar. (2) Multiple pattems. (3) Lower-leve1 outranking higher-leve1 pattems. (4) Functional motivation, but ( 5 ) persistence of pattems despite absence of functionality. These considerations underline (6) the insufficiency of models positing innate, absolute, few and simple rules.
topic Spanish
English
exocentric compounds
Cognitive grammar
functional motivation.
url http://revistas.um.es/ijes/article/view/48321
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