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Demonstratives and possessives with attitude

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Linking grammatical analyses with ideas about a shareable reality, this book investigates some fascinating ways in which nominal reference is exploited to meet interpersonal and rhetorical goals. It focuses on the use of demonstrative and possessive determiners in Polish discourse and proposes that the phenomenon of deixis be reexamined in the light of linguistic variation. The book illustrates a growing concern with the application of cognitive grammar to the study of situated language use and its social outcomes. What emerges is a new understanding of the role of deictic elements as tools fo

Title Demonstratives and possessives with attitude : an intersubjectively-oriented empirical study / Magdalena Rybarczyk.
Publisher Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania : John Benjamins Publishing Company
Creation Date 2015
Notes "This book grew out of my Ph.D. dissertation written at the University of Warsaw."
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
English
Content Demonstratives and Possessives with Attitude
Editorial page
Title page
LCC data
Dedication page
Table of contents
Acknowledgements
List of figures
List of tables
List of abbreviations
Preface
Chapter 1. Meaning construction and nominal reference
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Meaning in cognitive grammar
1.2.1 Meaning is essential, and it is emergent
1.2.2 Meaning is conceptualization
1.2.3 Meaning is encyclopedic
1.2.4 Meaning is usage-based
1.2.5 Meaning is shared
1.3 Reference
1.4 Viewing arrangement and construal
1.5 Deixis and the grounding predications in English
1.6 Covert grounding in Polish1.7 Conclusion
Chapter 2. Demonstratives: Judging distances
2.1 Introduction
2.2 English demonstratives
2.3 Polish demonstratives
2.4 Emphatic and attitudinal ten
2.4.1 Demonstratives combined with proper names
2.4.1.1 Marking intersubjectively-shared familiarity
2.4.1.2 Marking familiarity and distance
2.4.1.3 Distancing 'close' individuals
2.4.1.4 Marking noteworthiness
2.4.1.5 Demonstratives combined with country names
2.4.2 Demonstratives combined with body parts
2.5 Conclusion
Chapter 3. Possessives: Forming groups
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Possession and possessive constructions3.2.1 The meaning of the possessive construction
3.2.2 Possessive construals
3.2.2.1 Profiling and mental scanning
3.2.2.2 The possessor and the possessed
3.2.2.3 Possessive pronouns and relational nouns in possessives
3.2.2.4 Inalienability and the dative of possession
3.2.2.5 Dominion and the personal sphere
3.3 Possessive pronouns in interaction
3.3.1 Default reference points
3.3.2 Manipulating reference points in interactive frames
3.4 Possessive pronouns vs. demonstratives
3.4.1 A possessive pronoun, a demonstrative, or something else?3.4.2 A possessive pronoun and a demonstrative
3.5 Conclusion
Chapter 4. Case study: "Solidarni 2010"
4.1 Introduction
4.2 The proximal demonstrative ten
4.3 Possessives
4.3.1 Poland
4.3.2 The president
4.4 Conclusion
Chapter 5. Demonstratives and possessives in experimentation
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Experiment 1: Emotionality scale
5.2.1 Attitudinal ten
5.2.2 Possessives
5.3 Experiment 2: Drawing distances
5.3.1 Café: Interpersonal distance
5.3.2 Office: Affective distance
5.4 Experiment 3: Matching for intersubjective coordination5.5 Conclusion
Chapter 6. Conclusions and discussion
6.1 Introduction
6.2 How to approach intersubjectivity in language?
6.2.1 Research plan and multiple empirical approaches
6.2.2 Setting the stage: Corpus-illustrated analysis
6.2.3 The show: Corpus-based analysis
6.2.3.1 The right kind of corpus
6.2.3.2 Case study
6.2.4 Behind the scenes: Experimentation
6.3 Theoretical considerations
6.4 Outlook
6.5 Conclusion
References
Data and internet sources
Author index
Subject index
Series Human Cognitive Processing, 1387-6724
Volume 51
Extent 1 online resource (248 p.)
Language English
Copyright Date ©2015
National Library system number 997010716701205171
MARC RECORDS

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