Cognitive Semantics and the Polish Dative
eBook - PDF

Cognitive Semantics and the Polish Dative

  1. 251 pages
  2. English
  3. PDF
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - PDF

Cognitive Semantics and the Polish Dative

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Yes, you can access Cognitive Semantics and the Polish Dative by Ewa Dabrowska in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Languages & Linguistics & Languages. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Table of contents

  1. Acknowledgments
  2. A note on interlinear glosses
  3. Chapter 1: Introduction
  4. 1.1. Some historical threads
  5. 1.2. Theoretical framework and basic concepts
  6. 1.3. Overview
  7. Chapter 2: The meaning of the dative
  8. 2.1. The concept of personal sphere
  9. 2.2. The dative and the semantics of the verb
  10. 2.3. The ethic dative
  11. 2.4. The structure of the dative category
  12. 2.5. Conclusion
  13. Chapter 3: Dative and nominative experiencers
  14. 3.1. Preliminaries
  15. 3.2. Perception vs. hallucination
  16. 3.3. “Reasoned” convictions vs. mistakes and idiosyncratic associations
  17. 3.4. “Wanting”: definite intention vs. wistful longing or biological drive
  18. 3.5. Attitudes: Judgement vs. natural inclination
  19. 3.6. Subjective experience vs. objective properties
  20. 3.7. Nominative-dative verbs
  21. 3.8. Conclusion
  22. Chapter 4: Dative and accusative targets
  23. 4.1. Introduction
  24. 4.2. Verbs of communication
  25. 4.3. Bodily experience
  26. Chapter 5: The dative and prepositional constructions
  27. 5.1. Expressing the beneficiary: the dative and prepositional phrases with dla ‘for’
  28. 5.2. Target person, source and goal: the dative and prepositional phrases with do ‘to’ and od ‘from’
  29. 5.3. Personal sphere vs. location: the dative and prepositional phrases with u ‘at’
  30. 5.4. Dative and prepositional constructions: A summary
  31. 5.5. Prepositional constructions with datives
  32. Chapter 6: The personal sphere in other languages
  33. 6.1. The English verb have
  34. 6.2. External NP constructions in Japanese
  35. 6.3. The personal sphere in Polish, English and Japanese
  36. 6.4. A word on English ditransitives and the “dative” ni in Japanese
  37. Chapter 7: Conclusion
  38. 7.1. Comparison with other analyses
  39. 7.2. Schemas and prototypes
  40. 7.3. The status of semantic roles
  41. 7.4. The importance of conventional imagery
  42. 7.5. Motivation and predictability
  43. 7.6. Final remarks
  44. Notes
  45. Bibliography
  46. Index